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AGRICULTURAL.
TOPICS OK INTEREST RELATIVE
TO FARM AN1> GARDEN.
The Feet, of Sheep,
that “If is, the will “hoof bring of the sheep the is golden,” farm, it
money to
oehooves every shepherd to look well tc
this appendage of his flock. They need
Iht -onstant care and watching and to otherwise prevent
ir growing out too long
disabling. Pretty much alt foot ailments this di
rnay he traced to want of care in
rection. For instance, a distorted hoof
will gather dirt, hold moisture, and
sooner or Inter contract disease.
At flock the time of s.l earing, every examined, sheep in
a should he carefully
not only for surface diseases, hut espe
cially as nippers to the and state ashoer’s of the hoof. knife A should stout
pair of
be in the possession of every flockrnastur.
All overgrowth should he taken off, and
also all dead and useless matter removed,
if the toes are tttrued up cut them off as
near as may he, so you do not touch the
quick. examine Then the bring cleft, the corners into
shape, there, and with if there is
tenderness swab it a solu
tion of carbolic acid, and then give it a
coat of tar as hot as can be borne. In
the autumn, before the sheep are folded
fur the winter, they should again he care
fully examined and operated on for what
body, ever difficulty limbs in ay he found either in the
or hoofs. 1 ri this way, with
a watchful eye during the intervening
periods, there is no reason why sheep
may not be kept as healthy as any other
farm stock, and yet how many are bo? —
Badger Farmer.
Scabby I*ofatoes.
This year m many places potatoes arc
hiore the scabby t han ever before, while in
have same neighborhoods other farmers
succeeded in growing good crops of
fair tubers. It would seem that the prob
lem as to what, causes seahhiness might
be solved under these conditions. Many
farmers feel quite certain that worms
cause the injury, as they are usually, if
not But always, this found lie rather connected with it.
may an effect than a
cate-e Too much fresh manure, coupled
seahhiness. with dry weather, will awaya produce
Manure drying in the soil
breeds fungus growths. These attack
the, potato and destroy the skin. The
worms come after w hen the interior of
the potato is exposed to them. Of them
selves they cannot penetrate the skin. 1!
worms caused t he scab we should find
potatoes sometimes in which they were
just beginning work. Wo do in dry
weather sometimes find potatoes slightly
mouldy. If these are dug and put in
elost! heaps the mould soon develops into
rot. It it, is mould that causes the scab
ought on potatoes some preparation of sulphur
to be a cure. This is corroborated
by the experience of some fanners, who
have found a leaspoonful of superphos
phate of lime planted with the potatoes
prevented seahhiness. In this ease it was
probably the excess of sulphuric acid in
dissolving fungus. the hone that destroyed the
Now the qurstion is svl.rthri
land piaster, which is the sulphate of
lime planted in the hill with potatoes,
will have the same effect. Who has tried
this? If laud plaster wilt do the busi
ness it is certainly cheaper than super
phosphates.-- Aineri'dii Cnltimtor.
Brief unit Direct.
Farm animals are hurt more by medi
cine than by the luck of it. When an
animal needs medicine, it needs a com
petent physician,
I‘ure water and a variety of wholesome
food regularly given, with comfortable
shelter and kind treatment, arc the best
preventives of disease.
We an yet |l)oe., 1887] in search of
the man who at harvest blamed himself
for cultivating the crop too well, or who
in his old age regretted that ho had not
indorsed for r friend oftener.
Better is it to have one pair of trousers
with money in pockets, than two pairs
with empty pockets.
The man with clean stables and fields,
well-housed cattle ami implements, and
who has dollars for books but not a cent
for rum, is a desirable debtor. But he
does not borrow often.
Three fourths of us unknowingly re
duee our capital each year. For the fer
tility of our land is our capital, and this
we lessen.
The horse knows all that the colt
learned, and hoys tormenting the colt
are Know. not teaching it what it should
Men do not gather roses from thistles,
bush nor plump, that bright gooseberries from the
grows in the soti, and is
pruned is better only by nature. cheaper
It and to mend the
fines in midwinter than to build a new
house in spring, though the insurance
company contributes to the new build
ing.
The more often the currycomb rubs
against the horses’s sides, the more days
his sides will rub against the harness.
The man who buries his wealth in th«
<arlIt is blamed; yet the farmer who
buries wealth, in the form of tile drains,
is wise.
Two many forget that only from th<
best milk ean the best hotter he made
and that only {torn the host cows eat
the best milk he obtained.
System worked ten hours a day, and
was done. Haphazard got up at four in
the morning, hurried all day, and was
doing There chores at half-past niueat night.
are men who compel their wives
to milk cows, sitting in the snow on the
loo side of a r.iil fence, yet who declare
themselves to he Christians.
The .lack of all trades is master ol
none, yet a good farmer may with profit
become a fair carpenter. A workshop is
a bettor stormy tlay retreat Hum is a
corner grocery,
.lob had much patience; yet it was
fortunate for him that lie diet not join
fences with a neighbor who had lneacUy
stock.
The man who fi'ls his icehouse pro
vides himself with a conservator ol
health, and a servant of pleasure.
What is said about keeping animal.’
warm during H.e winter, does not apply
to the manure. Smoking heap is more injurious
to compost than to ls>ys.
It is cheaper to keep a |nuind of flesh
on the animal in February and March
.halt to regain it iu May or June.
principal Hejiending iqnm is breakfasting novelties for "ela- yout
tion. dining crops hope, on
on mid supping on
sorrow. .Im-rah Agriculturist.
HOI SEIIOGJ) MATTERS.
How to Cook a Turkey.
A good authority full directions on the subject gives
tli& following for cooking
a turkey: French works on cooking
tell us that poultry and game should
never he washed. This may do for
French markets and appetites, hut where
poultry is sent to market undrawn, the
inside is sometimes sour, and apt to give
an unpleasant taste to the stuffing and
the flesh as well. If the fowl has been
drawn as soon as killed, and the gall has
not been broken, it will not need wash
ing; but if there is the least suspicion
of which taint, wash it well in cold and water, to of
a teaspoonful of soda, tw o
salt, have been added. There is an
infinite variety of receipts for stuffing a
turkey. A plain dressing, which is the
basis of all, is made with breadcrumbs
mixed with butter, pepper, salt, and
thyme or sweet marjoram. The bread
should be soaked in cold water and
sijeezcd dry in a towel. The excellence
of the seasoning will Add depend all seasonings upon the
skill of the cook. a
little at a time, and taste to see when
you have it right If you have not served
an oyster soup previously, is excellent. an oyster or
celery stuffing most Use
as much of the oyster liquor as may he
necessary to moisten the bread, diluting
it with half the quantity of water or
inilk, and about two dozen small oysters
to a ten-pound [must turkey. be served In this with case an it.
oyster sauce juice of
For this, bring to a boil the
half a pint of oysters and one-half pint
of milk, also boiling; thicken with two
tcaspoonfuls of liour wet with cold
water, add tho oysters, give one boil,
and serve. For a celery stuffing the
celery must he stewed and mixed with
the bread crumbs, which should have
been moistened with hot milk. A sauce
is made by heating a half pint of milk,
thickening it as above, and adding
celery that has been cut in half-inch
pieces and stowed until tender; season
witli butter, pepper, and salt, and the
least trifle of grated nutmeg. You may
also change your dressing by the addi
tion of cold minced veal or sausage meat.
Now, having decided upon the style
in which your turkey is to he dressed,
and having washed it preparatory to the
pxocess, fill the body and craw as full as
may he, and sew the aperture with cotton
twine; draw the legs closely in to the body,
and tic or skewer them the place, or the
bird will come out of oven in any
thing but a shapely condition, with its
limbs pointing to the four points of the
compass. Bend it the the wings baking-pan, back undci
the body, all place with in salt and sea- and
son it over pepper,
let it stand several hours before it, goes
into the oven, that the seasoning and flavor in the tho
dressing may permeate little into the
meat. Pour a water pan,
and put it in a moderate oven for the
first hour, so that it may heat through
slowly. Baste frequently, and increase
the heat after the first hour. A ten
pound bird should be. baked from two
and a half to three hours. Half an hour
before it is done, dredge it with /lour,
and haste every ten minutes until f Ik
cooking is finished. If it is not very fat,
skewer thin slices of fat larding pork
over brown the breast before made baking. Serve
sauce as well, from the
gravy in the pan, even if you have celery
or oyster sauce. Make the brown gravy
by mlding the a little hot water which to the gravy have
in pan, from you
skimmed the fat. Thicken it with flour
wet with cold water ; and the stewed
giblets lemon juice chopped the fine, seasoning. and put a dash Serve ol
lo
currant with or tho cranberry-jelly, turkey. or spiced
plums
Other Recipes.
Hol t; Roast.—P ut some beef with a
sliced onion into a stone crock and covet
with good vinegar (cold), put in pepper,
salt and a few c loves. Let this stand a
whole day and night, and the next day
roast in the oven, vinegar ami all.
Disksski) Tonoii-'..- Take a corned
tongue and boil till tender; split it and
stick in ti few cloves, cut one onion, a
tittle thyme, add some browned flour.
Have the tongue covered with water, in
which mix the ingredients, add three
hard with hard boiled boiled eggs chopped fine; garnish
eggs.
Cheap Koi.i.s.- —Take cold mush (corn
meal or hominy flour h ami knead into enough
Graham to form a dough, just still
enough to handle with flour, make into
rolls three or four inches long and nearly
an inch thick, then bake in a hot oven
from thirty to forty minutes. They
best when eaten warm.
Corn whites Starch.—O of ne three pint tablespoon of milk,
three eggs,
fuls of corn boil starch, three milk, add tahlespoonfuts the
of sugar; the
custard ingredients, of and pint pour of in milk, mold. three Make yolks a
one
of flavor. eggs and Add three boiled tablespoonfuls milk, and of
when
ready to serve, pour around the
part. Baked Aiti.es.—T ake dozen
a or
more juicy Baldwins, wipe and core,
Into a tin baking pan and tilt the
with sugar , take a of taVilespoonful flour, rub of but
ter and the same
until smooth; to this pour just boiling
till there is enough to the cover the
apples, hake in' grate slow nutmeg over hour
a oven an or more,
Nice for dessert.
Hominy Cam;*. —Cold hominy
from breakfast one morning may
utilized the next iu cakes. Mix
cold hominy perfectly an equal amount add of
flour until smooth; a tea
spoonful of salt, and thin off with
buttermilk, into part of which a tea
-spoonful of soda has been
when of the consistency melted of corn cakes, add
a hake dessertspoonful usual. of butter, and
as
Ykumh-ki.ia PunniNc.—Parboil twelv.
ounces of vermicelli, drain it in a sieve,
ami put into a stew-pan with a quart of
cream, four ounces of butter, half a
pound of of sugar, the the juice grated and rind grated rind
two oranges of one
lemon, and the juice of half a one, and a
little salt; cover and let it simmer slowly
until the cream is nearly absorbed; tori'
out to cool on a dish. Then add the
yelks of six froth, eggs, and the whites beat
into a stiff mix thoroughly yet
mold, lightly. and Put bake it for into hour a well
an and a half in
a moderate oven. When done, turn it
on dish and serve with sauce.—.1
t grietcttvri
To he intelligent is to he honest, kind
and good
The liRdipi’ Fnvorite.
The newest fashion in ladies' hats w’ll doubt
less cause the a fair flutter of Ladies pleasurable always excitement
among sex. are sus
ceptible to the changes of a fashion plate; and
the more startling the departure, the more
earnest the gossip over the new mode. Dr.
Pierce’s for the Favorite ills whfch Prescription afflict females is a and positive make
cure
their lives miserable. This liispla* sovereign panacea
can he relied on in cases of men s and
all functional derangements. It builds up the
poor, haggard and dragged-out victim, and
gives her renewed cope and afresh lease of
life. It is the only medicine for woman’s
peculiar weaknesses and ailments, sold by
druggists, under a positive guarantee from
thc manufacturers, that It Will refunded. give salisflle Head
lion in every rase, or money
printed guarantee on bottle wrapper.
During cold weather the ball room belle in
deeoilete costume is dressed to kill.
•---
Conflunuxioii Surely Cured.
To the Editor:—Please inform your readers
that i have a positive remedy for tho above of
named disease. By its timely use thousands
boneless cases have send been permanently bottles of cured, remedy i
shall be glad to two my
khee to any of your readers who have con
sumption if they will send me their Express
“'VirfeMMlW SU N.Y.
Life is burdensome, alike to the sufferer and
all around him, while dyspepsia and iis at
lendingevils holds sway. « ompiaints of ibis
nature can he speedily cured by taking Prickly
Ash Hitters regularly. Thousands once thus
afflicted now bear cheerful testimony as to its
merits.
•Smell In » Drug store.
What smells most in a drug store? Your
nose. But when you have a cold, nothing.
(Jure coughs and colds by taking and Mul
Cherokee Remedy of .Sweet Gum
lein.
By means of a solution and an
called a Nebulizer tho worst case of
can be quickly and pleasantly cured. For
ticulars address. City Free Hall pamphlet. Pharmacy,
B’vvay, New York.
THE ENIGMA.
What the Scientific World Wants to
Know.-A 81 00,000 Offer,
We have published in our columns from
time to time different advertisements in re
gard to Bright's Disease and its cures.
What is this terrible disease?
We have taken the trouble to make an in
vestigation from the best sources, and we
give the results to our reader?.
What astonishes us is the general indiffer
ence In given sound to kidney alarm disorders. Thekidneys
not the of their diseased coa
lition, owing to the tact that they have very
few nerves, hence few suspect that there is
my disease in them. Irritation, inflamma
tion. ulceration set in. and then the little
tubes, stroyed of which the kidneys are full, are de
and thrown off, and from this fact
are called tube casts.
As soon as this begins to take place it is only
a question of how fast decomposition goes oh
before the disease results fatally. If the
proper remedies are taken before final de
composition becomes or waste of these tubes com
menees or too far advanced, that is
the only and last chance for relief. It is at this
jmint or before that Warner's safe cure
proves wasting so beneficial, of the and mav cure or stop the
vanced too away far. kidneys if it has not ad
The most remarkable thing of all our in
vestigation Bright's disease is the has fact that the patient with
no exclusive symptoms,
■ at* has the symptoms of every common
!iS'-aso.
First lie may possibly feel a dull pain in
ais back, generally upon one side, which does
not debar him from his usual business rou
tine. After a time he may begin to feel
neuralgic what lie pains, call or have a slight attack of
with high may dark rheumatism, or headache,
or colored urine, with an un
pleasant sensation in its passage, and after
standing I-ater showing an unnatural condition.
on, come tired feelings, loss of ambi
tion or vigor, or loss of or failing eyesight,
which is very common, with a distressed con
dition of the stomach. Any one of these
symptoms is liable to occur.
This no doubt explains why the proprietors
of Warner's safe curearc curing so many dis
eases. kidneys, By regulating and building up the
symptoms They of general ill-health dis
appear. fession justly accuse the medical pro
of treating the effects and not tho
cause. the patient Finally if this disorder is neglected
cither dies of appoplexy, pneu
monia, heurt disease, blood poisoning, con
sumption, is or any other disease that the sys
tem most subject to.
There appears to lie some one cause for
nearly every but other ailment of the human
system, been up to the present time no one has
able to fully account for this terrible
malady. We understand that the people of
Germany fatality, have become aware of its fearful
and have offered 400,000 marks
(#100,000) to any one that can satisfactorily
explain the cause.
Good Financial Showing.
The Freedman's Aid Society has 124 es
tablished 24 schools, employing attendance of
teachers, with an average
4,500 pupils. There are fifteen schools
for whites, with an attendance of 2,000.
To carry out the work on the plans pro
posed for next year will require almost is
$2'»0,000, and of this sum only #700
on hand. Since its foundation the socie
ty has expended almost #2,000,000 in the
work of education in the South, and has
school property of almost #1,000,000 in
value in its possession. The receipts for
last year were #104,424.55, of which sum
the conference collections amounted to
#85,030. Bequests yielded #24,000.35.
Of the receipts of #184,424.55, only
#20,057.55 was paid by students. The
total expense for the year amounted to
# 183, <1,80. IMS.
The most novel complaint of impure
milk reported is that of the London hoy
boarded out underthe poor-law regulation
who reported that (he milk given him out
of town, instead of being taken out of
clean tins, had been squeezed out of a
nastv cow, and he “seed ’em a-doing of
it."
Tlie ('meat l.ltlle Thins".
"rate!" lie echoed. “Well 1 don't know as
the adjective would liave occurred to me in
lust that connection. But if you mean that
th y dp their work thoroughly, i et make no
tuss bout it; ....
short,are a veryt-hing eause no pain that or pill weakness; and,
m • a ought to lie,
arid nothing that it. ought not,then I agree that
I'ien-.-’H Pleasant Purgative Pellets are about
the cutest little things going!
A new society in New York lias organized
for the study of politics.
Ili-lilnir Pile".
slinging; Symptoms —Moisture; by scratching. intense itching and
worse If allowed to
continue tumors form, which often bleed and
ulcerate, becoming itching very sore. Sway.nk’r heals Oint
mknt stops the and bleeding, ul
ceration, mors. Equally and in i-tllcaelous many eases in removes curing nil the Skin tu
Diseases. Dlt.SAVAYNE &SON, Philadelphia.
Sent by mail for 50ots. Also soul by druggists.
makes Evolution.—Tight whiskey, boots make a corn, corn
whiskey makes n, man tight.
Mild, soothing, and healing is I)r. Sage’s Ca
tarrh Remedy.
Tho National Farmers’ Alliance, Shrove
roi* , “resolved” against foreign pauper labor.
If afflicted with ore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp*
sou’s Kyo* water. Druggists sell at 25c. per bottle.
The Plain Truth
Is that Hood's Sarsaparilla has cured thousands of
sooplo who Buffered severely w-lth rheumaUsm. It
neutralizes the lactte aeld In the blood, which causes
those terrible pains and aches, and bIbo vitalizes and
enriches the blood, thus preventing the reeurrenee
of the disease. These facts w arrant u» In urging
you, if you suffer w-lth rheumatism, to give Hood’s
Sarsaparilla a trial.
-- Having been troubled with inflammatory rheu
matism for many years, my favorable attention was
called to Hood's Sarsaparilla. I have now used three
bottles and ean already testify to henettcial results.
I highly recommend Bloomfield, it as a great X. blood puritler. —
J. C. ay Kits, West Y.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla Prepared only
Sold bv i. all druggist*. $1; six for $5.
by C. HOOD CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
fOO Doses One Dollar
pmm t Bitters
li 5ENMA-MAND3AKE-BUCHU
use i onus EauAuyejriciotTnuatDics
It hat stood the Test of Tears,
A ■feaHELOOD.LIVEK, i n Caring all Diseases of the
8T0M
k ACH, SIDNEYS.B0W
SIS, &c. It Purifies the
BITTERS wThCIIBlood, { !eiascs Invigorates ^ 8 Sy3tem and
* ' l -
DYSFEFSIA.CONSTI
CURES PATION, JAUNDICE,
AU.O:S£ASESGFTKE SICKKEAD ACHE, BIL
LIVER IOUS COMPLAINTS,&c
KIDNETYS disappear at once tinder
its beneficial influence.
STOMACH It is purely cathartic a Medicine
AND as its proper
BO ties forbids its use as a
___ " S3 SziT ’'Ssntto bsverage. It is end pleas
<®Vbvic^ 2tt 4P i easily me taken taste, by child- as
: uintScocTu*’
8 * as aduitA
ALLORUhnBLS]Bp B | CKiy ASH bitters co
PRICEIOOUARI Hole Proi rietor*. Om
HT.Lo( T S**u<t KaSra
ST. JACOBS OIL.
WHAT IT HAS DONE.
Relief. —In any climate at any Oil season relieves; one
or two applications of St. Jacobs
often cures permanen tly. This is the average
experience in ten years.
!
I Cures.—The contents of a bottle have cured
i thousands of extreme chronic cases. Used ac
cording to iMm-tinna directions there there is is a a cure cure in in
every bottle.__
Tile substantiate Testimony.— the above Thousands statements of testimo- in the
nials
evre of all kinds of painful ailments.
The Proof. —To make sure of this show
ing, answers of to the inquiries resulted concerning follows; the per
manency cures as
That from date remained of healing to date without of response
every cure has permanent re
currence of pain.
ties Its sold Supremacy. be justly —The rated twenty million bot
can case" as so many cures; Its
in almost every of a permanent bottle being cure. the
price is the surety bottle being every and the
same, every a cure poor
are protected.
Sold by Druggists and Dealers Everywhere.
The Charles A. Vogeler Co., Balto., Md.
SPTly’5 Ife! THOUSANDS
«ny that
HAY-fEVER ELY’S CREAM BALM
cured them of
- «*** CATARRH
Apply Balm into eacli nostril.
-S-Y :-V us-M Klv Bros.,335Greenwich St.,N.Y.
KSDDER’9
J mm 'Ai \\ IJ
u
■
-
A SURE CURE FOR
INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA.
DIGESTYLIN, Over 5,000 Physicians have H sent la the us best their preparation approval of
for Indigestion saying that they that have used.
ever
DIGESTYLIN We have never beard of a case of Dyspepsia whore
was taken that was not cured.
FOR CHOLERA INFANTUM.
IT WILL CURE THE MOST AGGRAVATED CASKS.
IT WILL STOP VOMITING IN PREGNANCY.
IT WILL RELIEVE CONSTIPATION.
For Summer Complaints and Chronic Dlarrhcea,
which are the direct results of Imperfect digestion.
DIGESTYLIN will effect an Immediate cure.
Take DYGESTYLIN for all pains and disorder# of
the stomach; they DIGESTYLIN all come from Indigestion. $1 large Ask
your bottle). drv£$)*t for (price per
Ir he does not have It send one dollar to ui
Do and not we hesitate will send to a send bottle to you, express Our prepa-'d. nouse is
your five money.
reliable. EstoVdlshed twenty IIHH.K years. CO.
WM. F. H «fc L
Manufacturing Chemist** h,'l John St.i n.y,
MARVELOUS
MEMORY
DISCOVERY.
Wholly unlike artificial systems.
Any book learned In oue rending*
Reco munended by it ark Twain. Richard Judah P. Proctob, Benja
theSc lentlst, Hons. W.W. Aston.
min, Dr. Minor. Ac. Class of 100 Columbia Law sen*
dents; 300 at Meriden ; 2!»0 at Norwich ; BOO at Obcrlln
College; two classes of 200 each at Yale; 400 at Uni
versity of Penn, Phlla.; 400 ut Wellesley College, and
three large classes Jit from Chatauqun University, Aa
Prospfftufi vnov post I .OTRFTTE. fuek 357 Fifth A New York
up..
ASTHMA
BRONCHITIS, HAY FEVER, and all Dl»
i-a»e* ol the BLOOD, can be cored nnlzbz
DD‘ HAIR’S SYSTEM of Treatment,
whicn is now recognized by the medical world as
the diseases! only one that will^positively and permanent^
Not only doestt excel all other
in giving quick relief, but it Thousands absolutely have cures
worst coses permanently. Convincing and concluaive proof
cured by it. Treatise, sent free.
tie found in my 64 page
Dr. B. W. HAIR, 233 W. FOURTH
CINCINNATI. OHIO.
1 CURE FITS!
warrant, injr remedy to cure tho worst caeea. Because
ethers have failed is no reason for not now receiving a
cure. Send at once for a treatise and a Free Bottle
Blair S Dill IllSe a Great English Gout and
I Rheumatic Remedy.
Oval Box* 34) round* 1-1 Pills.
DATE 9 NTS SS®r* book of
teuton. D. C. Send forour
HOME 8 J Kf> ^ n ^ anv h^p, Anthmrtir
ruiarsfree^ BK th V K Vr’A'OL i'eUK,' hufalo.' N.
FREE sSSSS
I A MONTH. Ancnts Wanted. 90 best
'Address ing articles in the world. 1 sample Frtc.
JA Y IfRONSUN, Detroit, Mich.
PISOS CURE FOR CONSUMPTION
I I > \ I.ill’S Kuwin«*tt*i Collpge.Phila.. $>40- Pa,
tions furnished. Life Scholarships
P '--i v.. 1 -— . r.-lm SHI aagii a
£ PROPHET 0Rs Of . ^ -p
hr.^AOtS C.ArAf\ RH fyCMEDy 1 i
Tv
I
I
o ^ For a case of Catarrh in the Head which they cannot cure. <
3
! i b iqPl'iiV " mi
ibst.
CATARRH IN THE HEAD.
SYMPTOMS OF THE DISEASE. -Dull, heavy headache,
obstruction of the nasal pnssages, discharges falling from the J
head Into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at
others, the thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody and putrid;
coughing eyes are weak; there is ringing in the ears, deafness, hacking
or to clear the throat, expectoration of offensive mat
ter, together with scabs from ulcers; the voice is changed and
lias a * nasal twang”; the breath is offensive; smell and taste
sion, impaired; hacking there cough is a sensation of dizziness, with mental depres- of
a and general debility. Only a few the
above-named symptoms are likely to be present in any one case.
Thousands of cases annually, without manifesting half of the
above symptoms, result in consumption, and end in the grave.
No disease is so common, more deceptive and dangerous, less
understood, or more unsuccessfully treated by physicians.
Common n_„„_ Sense If yon would remove an evil, strike at its
Treatment.
■mill iiiini.nm.imiinaiii( cure the diseaso our chief aim must he
directed to the removal of that cause. The more we see of this
odious disease, and we treat successfully thousands of cases an
nually at the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, the more do
we realize the importance of combining with the use of a local,
soothing and blood-cleansing healing application, a thormigh and persistent inter
nal use of and tonic medicines.
In curing catarrh and all the various diseases with
uH - Lr which bronchial, it is and so frequently lung diseases, complicated, weak stomach, as throat,
tarrtml deafness, inflamed ca
IltLinnuL. hF! IIUPP weak or eves, impure
blood, scrofulous and syphilitic taints, the wonder-
1 * 111 ful powers and virtues of Dr. Pierce's Golden Med
ical Discovery cannot lie too strongly extolled. It has a specific
^2 M<5£125 o o o
o o o
r. .
p~ ml
13 k ■<:\
P LEA SA £i x. /1 %j%| ^[lITLE ' f,r JHE ORIGINAL (
ff LIVER PILLS. •7
, HXS
PURELY VEGETABLE! PERFECTLY HARMLESS!
W As a LIVER PILL, they are L'neqnaled!
SMALLEST, CHEAPEST, EASIEST TO TAKE
Beware of Imitations, which contain Poisonous Minerals. Always ask f° r
Dr. Pierce's Pellets, which are little Sugar-coated Pills,
or Anti-bilious Granules. ONE PELLET A DOSE.
A Sold by Druggists. SICK HEADACHE,
28 Cents a Vial. Bilions Indigestion, Headache, Dizziness, Constipation,
Bilions Attacks, and ail derange
ments of the stomach and bowels, are promptly re
BEING PTRFAV VEGETABLE, - he red and pofmanently cured by the use of Dr.
Pierce’s Pellets. In explanation of their remedial
Dr. Pierce's Pellets operate without disturbance to power over so creat a variety of diseases, it may universal, not» , .
the system, diet, or occupation. Put up in glass truthfully gland tissue be said that their action upon the system is
vials, hermetically sealed. Aiwa vs fresh and relia- or escaping their sanative influence.
ble. purgative, As a gentle they give laxative, tin- alterative, perfect or aulve Jtaimfietnred by WOBLP’S PISPESS4RT JKDICAL 1SS0CUTI0R,
most satisfaction BtTPPAI.O, 3Sf- XL
wel Sr^ er
g
pm L 4 ■
SOES DIRECT TO WEAK SPOTS.
Youth, Don’t allow Health, yourself Vigor. As to good break. Keep up
at 50 years as
at 25, as good at 75 as at 40. At the first sipns
of going back Rejuvenates begin the use lagging of Wells’ Health
Rkkbwkb. vital forces,
causes the blood For to weak course through delicate the vein*
as in youth. men, women,
Cures s Dyspepsia, Brain or Nervous Weairirss.
Exhaus Drug, tea Ex. Vitality, E. 8. Wells, Restores Jersey Vigor. City,111, #..00
or
Buchu-Paiba annoying Kidney, Mm comp Quick dete CK,
cure, all Bladder and
Urinary diseases, Catarrh of Bladder, &c. $1.
Druggists E. S. Wells, Jersey City, N. J.
EXHAUSTED VITALITY
A Great Medical Work for Young
and Middle-Aged Men.
0f M.UfE m
KKOW THYSELF.,
Consulting ESMOTp® Physician. More than one millioncopie#
•old. I* treats upon Nervous and Physical Debility,
Premature Decline, Exhausted Vitality, Impaired
Vigor, and Impurities of the Blood, ana the untold
miseries consequent thereon. Contains 900 pas?en,
substantial embossed binding, full gilt. WarruniH
the best popular medical treatise by published matt, in th«
English language. Price only $1 postal
and concealed In a plain wrapper. JUustrMw
tarn pie free if you send now. Address as above.
A n me th i* p ayer. *
JONES
XX SI
PAYStheFREICHT 5 To# Wasoi Scales,
Xr«a l.«r«r«, Bie te*T Bsviagi. Bria
Tars Bun and B esa 1*1 for
. *800.
t Brsry aU« Seals. For and fre* ynvt'lS
f fo-? msattos chit paper midrem
* JONES IF BIROMAMTMl
BINGHA MTON. fUT
J.P. STEVENS&BR0,
JEWELERS. Atlanta, Ga.
Send for Cnialosiir.
SOLDIERS 22 years practice Success or nofe&
Laws sent free. A. W. McCormick & Son. Washittjrcon.U'
J9fc 3a P» ■% Lines to *8 not a under day. the Samples horse’s worth feet. |1.50, Write FKH
409# Brewster Safety Rein Holder Go.. Holly. Mich.
f ~1 Of* D is worth $500 per lb. Pett't.’s EyeSaiww
\JT worth $1,000, but is sold at 25c. a box by deiieri.
effect upon the lining- mucous membranes of the nosnl and other
air-passaaros, promoting the natural secretion of their follicles ana
glands, thereby softening the diseased and thickened membrane,
and restoring it to its natural, thin, delicate, moist, healthy con
dition. As a blood-purifier, it ia unsurpassed. As those diseases
which complicate catarrh are diseases of the lining mucous mem
branes, or of the blood, it will readily be seen why this medicine
is so well calculated to cure them.
Io5n z" | * all comparison the best preparation ever invented.
In CUT I It is mild and pleasant to use, producing no smarting
HiIC.ll I■ I or pain, and containing no strong, irritating, or caus
.... ful antiseptic, ............ ... tic and drug, speedily or other destroys poison. all This Bemedy smell which is a flCCOHl- power
bad comfort to
lanies so many cases of catarrh, thus affording great
hose who suffer from this disease.
Sal SSSSSsSS
Cures. up quers the throat, system bronchial, to a healthy and lung' standard, complications, and con
effects the lining when membrane any such exist, but, nasal from its spoonc it awf
upon of the passages, ulcerated
materially brane in healthy restoring condition, the diseased, thickened, or the disemfc mem
to a and thus eradicates
When a cure is effected in this manner it is permanent.
Both Dr. Fierce’s Golden Medical Discovery and Dr. Snge’l
Catarrh Remedy are sold by druggists the world over. Discover? cents;
$1.00, six bottles for $5.00. Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy 50
half-dozen bottles 82.50. to
A complete Treatise on Catarrh, giving valuable hints ns
clothing, diet, and other matters of importance, will be mailed
post-paid to any address, on receipt of a 2-cent postage 6tamp.
Address, World’s Dispensary medical Association,
No. 663 Main Buffalo, N. T