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AGRICULTURAL.
TOPICS OP IJiTKRKST RELATIVE
TO FARM AND GARDEN.
Pruning Grape Vines.
A subscriber at Elberon, N. .J., asks
when is the best time to prune grape
vines, if the cuttings can be utilized to
grow new vines? In answer we say:
The grape vines should be pruned before
the rising of the sap. No time should
now be lost, else the vines will bleed
badly. If cuttings are wanted cut last
year’s wood to two eyes, tie in bundles of
fifty each, set these on end and cover en
tirely with earth. If the cuttings had
been taken last fall, the spring would
have found the ends nicely calloused, for
growing. dition As soon as the soil is in con
for working in the spring, open a
trench, and *et the cuttings therein, on
an exact line, firming the soil very hard
about the bottom. I.cave the tipper eye
just about even with the top of the earth.
They should make strong plants by
autumn.— Farm, Field and Stockman.
Food for Cattle.
It has been proved in France by ex
periments made by M. Hcgnard that
lambs and calves flourish finely on a blood
diet, says a ( hicago Tribune corre
spondent. wasted 1 ons on tons of blood are now
which should be saved and
utilized on the great cattle ranges and
in the Chicago slaughter houses. No
more compact form of food can be found.
It would bear transportation to places
where no kind of grain or flour could
the profitably herbivora, be taken. All animals, even
are at, first nourished on a
diet of milk, which is purely animal
food,therefore a properly prepared blood
diet is not so much against nature as it
would seem at the first mention of it.
Iu France the blood is prepared by
heating This it to 100 degrees centigrade.
forms a coagulum which is pressed
and then rapidly dried in an oven. The
blood thus desieated is then ground in a
mill like a spice or coffee mill, when it is
ready to be sacked for shipment, it is
said to be destitute of odor and taste
and keeps well. It requires but a very
small quantity of this blood food to
tion. keep a lamb or calf in excellent condi
In France, iu the experiments
made, the meal of blood was given
mixed witli other food, and the doses
were daily. only from ten to eighty grains
One of the experiments was ns fol
lows: Three lambs were kept on the
and ordinary diet of beet-root, hay, etc.,
to three others the powdered blood
was given. The first steadily lost flesh,
while the latter increased to three times
declared the original weight, and connoisseurs
fine lambs that they had never seen such
of the same age. The ani
mals surpassed their fellows which had
bcon suckled by their dams both in
weight and size, and their coat of wool
became doubled in thickness.
With calves there was the same aston
ishing mentation success, and this system of ali
is now found to be abo ap
plicable of to rickety the human race, and in the
case a child eighteen months
of age the results obtained were oven
beyond sanguine. the Tim expectations of the most
blood meal could doubt
less be dissolved in warm water very
readily. 8wkii?nch shape it could be given
to lambs abandoned by their mothers,
or to very young calve t.
At Chicago, and at all the great maim
this facturing blood places, immense quantities of
meal might lie cheaply pre
pared. It would doubtless he good for
man as well as boast, and a brand for
his. This use should should be also pared he with manufactured. due
to cleanliness, pn and would then form regard
a
more compact food than any known. It
could be used as an ingredient in soups
and many other dishes; with a small
sack of it mixed in proper proportion
witli cornmeal or oatmeal, a cowboy
might scout the mountains for a month.
He would only need water to prepare
a first-class soup, llad the De l ong
party been provided with a sack ofj this
blood-meal when they abandoned their
vessel in the Arcth- and took to the
shore they would have pulled through
the winter.
The cattle and sheep men of Idaho and
Montana should have a goodstock of this
blood meal prepared at t hicago or else
where next summer and shipped to them
for next winter. In the dry air of re
gions hitherward it would keep better
than in the East, where it might be in
jured by absorbing too much moisture in
damp this blood wtather. Dairymen will also want
food. They may then rear
their calves and at the same time sell all
the milk their cows produce.
Farm anti Garden Notes.
Very bcnofieial results aro reported
from tho use of nitrate of soda fertilizer.
A New England farmer reports that
cow manure produces many grub worms.
For producing egg* give chopped clo
ver and chopped meat, mixed and
scalded.
turis’, According to the American Agricul
all that is required for a smooth
waterproof face on the rough foundation
wall ot a house is to make good strong
sand and lime mortar, and then mix into
it, in email batches as used, one shovel
ful of cement to six or eight of the mor
uir. \\ hen the face of the wall lias been
made straight and smooth with this, put
on a tluu coat of cement and fine sand,
adding coloring matter if desired. To
brush lay the before face off in blocks, stripe with a
the mortar is thoroughly
dry.
A commission appointed by the French
Government to inquire iuto the use of
sak for domestic animals 8alt reported ought on
the matter as follows: i. to
be given to domestic animals to replace
the saline matter washed out of their
food by boiling, steamiug, etc. 2. Salt
counteracts the ill effects of wet pastures
and food on sheep, and prevents foot
rot. 5. It increases the flow of saliva,
and therefore hastens fattening. 4. In
making mixuresof chaff, potatoes, beets,
bran, oil cake, etc., salt always ought to
be added. The the daily allowance recom
mended by commission was for a
milch cow or ox 3 ozs.; for a fattening
stall-fed ox, 8 1-8 to 4 1-2 ozs.;
fattening sheep, pig, l to a ozs.; for a leau
I-8 to 3-4 of an oz., for a horse,
donkey or mule, 1 oz.
Russia’s cavalry equals that of Ger
many and Austria combined.
CONVINCING GUARANTEES.
Which are Justified by a World-Wide
Experience.
TO THE PUBLIC:
Having branch houses and laboratories in
seven different quarters, and therefore Warner having
a world wide experience, we. H. H.
& Co., justify ourselves in making the follow
ing statements: held
f irst .—For the past decade we have
that 93 per cent, of diseases originate in the
kidneys, which introduce uric acid into the
system, a poison that is injurious to theorgans every or
gan, attacking and destroying first
which are the weakest. We have also held
that if the leidneys are kept in perfect Itealth
most of the ordinary ailments unit he pre
vented, or, if contracted, cured. Other
practitioners have held that extreme kidney
disease is incurable. We have proof to the
contrary, however, in hundreds of thousands
of cases in every kidneys section of the globe. of
Second .—The being the sewers
the human system, it is impossible to keep the
entire system in good working order unless
tiles- organs fire doing their kidneys full duty.
Most people do not believe their are
out of order because they never give them
any pain. It is a peculiarity of kidney dis
ease that it may long exist icithout the
knowledge of the patient or of If the practition- is
er. It may he susu cted there any
gradual departure from ordinary health,
which departure increases as age comes on.
Third .—We do not cure every known
disease from one bottle. This is an impossi
bility. Fourth. —Warner’s Safe Remedies have
I ecu recognized by the doctors and the peo
ple all o^ r the globe as standards of the
highest excellence.
Fifth .—We make the following unqualified
guarantees: Guaua.ntek 1.—That Warner’s Safe Rem
edies are pure, and harml- ss.
Guahkntke 9.— That the testimonials used
by us are gen uine, and so far as we know,
absolutely true. We will forfeit ?3,000 for
proof Guarantee to the contrary. ;i.—Warner’s Safe Remedies
have permanently cured many millions of
people whom the doctors have pronounced
incurable. Permanent cures are alwayscou
vincin Sixth p j roof a of merit. friends and neighbors
.—Ask your
what they think of Warner’s .Safe Cure.
REV. 8. I\ ARNOLD, Camden, Tenn., had fearful
abscesftCH canard by Kidney disease. In 187b and
1881, other running abacuses appeared. lie was
fully cured in 188vs by Warner's Safe Cure and iu
1888 reported himself sound and well, and he ia
over 7‘) years old.
MRS. ANNIE JENNESS-MILLER, editress of
brensy 258 Fifth avenue, Now York, eight yeais
ago wa cared of nervous prostration, when the
best New She England cured herself physicians with Warner could Safe do her no
good. and writes in 1887: “To-day 1 perfectly Cure,
am a
wed woman. It is the ouly medicine I ever
take.”
L. the R. highest PRICE, standing M. D.. a of gentleman Hanover and C. Ji., physician Va., four of
years ago, after trying every other remedy for
Bright's disease, including famous mineral wa
ters, cured hintt-eif by Warner’s Safe Cure, and
March 24, 18S8, wrote: "I have never had the
slightest symptoms of mv old and fearful trouble.
HERMAN URBAN ,of MacNeale .fc Urban, sare
makers, Cincinnati, (),, who was broken down by
excessive business cares, lie was fullv restored
to health four years ago robusthtal by Warner’* Safe Cure
and has since been in h.
DR DIO I.K.W1S wrote: "If 1 found myself af
flicted with a serious kidney disorder I would
use Warner s Bnfe i nre."
MRS. K. J. W< d.E, Gettysburg, Pa.; S. C. Farring
ton. Cincinnati, Gotha, Fla.; and J. M. Long,43 of J. East W. 2nd Westlake, street,
O.; the sister cured
Mt. Vernon, O., wore of consumption
Caused by kidney acid in the blood, as oyer half
the cases aro, by Warner’s Safo Cure.
We could give many thousands of similar
testimonials. Warner’s Safe Cure does ex
ns
Seventh. —Warner’s t-afe Remedies were
put on the market in obedience to a vow
made by II. II. Warner that, ii the remedy
now known as Warner’s Sura Cure, restored
him to health eutire he world. would In spread its merits the be
fore the ten years de
mand hits grown so that laboratories have
been established in seven quarters of the
globe. Warner’s Safo Cure is a scientific
speciflo thousands —it of cures the best u-he physicians t all the doctors prescribe fail, ii
regularly, its power over disease is perma
nent and its reputation is of the most exalted
churn'-tar. Oun you afford longer to ignore
Its extraordinary few power: Now, in the spring
of the yoar, a bottles will tone you up
and cure all those ill feelings which,unknown
to you, are caused by the fatal kidney poison
in the blood, which will surely end fatally,
if not at once removed. For this no othor
specific is known.
“Civilizing” Africa.
The Anti-Slavery Society, in London,
has received an important letter from
Enin Pasha, dated from Wedelai, Au
gust 16th, 1887, (nine months ago),
which is most interesting and instruc
tive, and will allay much anxiety con
cerning the fate both of Emin and of
Stanley. Emin begins by saying he does
friends not intend in England proceeding have to expected Zanzibar, him as his
to
do, but to remain where he is, and con
tinue the work of colonization ho has
begun in the Western shores of Lake Al
bert. Even when Stanley reaches him,
he will not alter his plans. “Would you
desert tour own work" he writes, “just
at the dawn of better times S” He ap
pears to be in good spiiits, and describes
the country he is civilizing as very prom
ising. With tlie consent, and even assis
tance of native chiefs, he has established
“stations,” and introduced order every
where. The crops were abundant, and
that cotton fairly. plantations Through were yielding
very the agency of
an Uganda, Etiglish missionary communication in
had opened a postal
been to and from Zanzibar,
as well as facilities of intercourse with
Uganda. He sins he is glad expedition, Stanley
chose the Congo road for his
as although he will encounter numberles
difficulties, arising mostly out of the soil
to go across, he will no doubt succeed in
overcoming them; while coming by
Uganda his progress would have been op
posed by force. Emin Pasha adds
that, once provided with the necessaries,
thinks it easy to open a direct road to
the sea coast by way of Lnnga and Masai
countries. The only obstacle he saw was
the fierceness of the Langs people, but
this,'too, might be conquered. Finally,
lt > mentions the fresh outbreak of war
between the kings of Uganda and Kabre
l) which had temporarily closed all
so that he was not ccr
tain when ho would bo ablo to forward
his letter,
Hox. Charles Gayarre, who was a
member of the United States Senate fifty
three years ago, is still living in city New
Orleans. Ho was born iu that in
1805, and is said to be a walking ency
clopedia of Louisiana history.
BaSks-irt' limbs
'W me ah
—
RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA
OR KINDRED ILLS.CTt c “15 e * v
A Railway Romance.
The great strike on the “ Q ’’ road re
towns oTthe main li^e'livS aman who
for vears has b*en in the employ of the
corporation which is now having trouble.
From apprentice boy in the workshop
he worked his way up until he became
an engineer. One night he was called
up and sent out on an extra. He had
not gone far on his run when something
danced before the glare of his headlight,
and as quickly did he reverse his engine,
Leaving the pilot, he walked down the
track and found a child neatly wrapped
and wide awake. He took it back to the
pilot, made a cot for it, and proceeded waif of
on his run. On liia return the
the road was taken to his home, adopted,
reared and educated She became one
of the beauties of the little town, anti
trrew into womanhood. The engineer,
u. though nearly thirty-five years o r
than the pretty-faced creature, loved
her and they were married,
Ihe other dfiy when there were ru
mors of a strike, the old engineer ap
pealed to his child-wife for advice, and
she begged and him to desert remain with road the
company not the on
which lie found her and from which he
rescued her. He consented, and there
is one of the old engineers who little is true
to the throttle. J have this story
from a gentleman old engineer who lives makes in his the home, town
where the
—Chicago Mail.
Hazel Eyes.
Young man, you had better not try to
flirt with a pub: of hazel eyes. It is a
waste of time and rather dangerous.
They are less susceptible than the blue
and when once deceived do not pine
away in grief, but rally for revenge and
take it out in scorn. If you tackle them
you had better go in to win or leave the
country. And while I think of it, I’ll
mako another remark:—When yon woo
and win and wed you had better keep
on winning afterward or leave tie coun
try. It takes a power of love to do
them.
‘Ah me!” sighed fioliow, Potts,“I’m ambitio tired of vait.” living,
'1 he worldis i s
“Come now!” said his chum, “I know the
symptoms; all liver—that’s plain.
It’s yoar very
“You need Peilets not suffer, gorigat for help the is easy;
Pierc -’s to place. mijht
‘A friend to the bilious,’ I well call
them—
There’s nothing be ter; they suit yotr case.”
Potts ceased his sighing and bought tie “Pel
lets.”
No more lie mourneth his his heart hapless lot
His face is cheerful, is lightsome,
IIi» moiancholy is qu.to forgot!
There is a policeman or constable f<r every
inhabitants in Ireland.
If Sufferers from Consumption
Scrofula, Bronchitis, and General Debi ity will
Scott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Cil with
Ilypophosphites, they will find immediate re
and permanent benefit. The Medical Pro
fession universally declare it a remedt of the
greatest value and very palatable. R*ad: ‘T
have used Scott’s Emulsion in severe cases
of Scrofula and Debility in Children. Jesuits
most gratifying. My little patients takeit with
pleasure.”—W.A.H ulbert, M.D.,Salisbiry,Ill.
Nntkinu .More ilanKcrou,
“Than n neglected cough,” is what Di. J. F.
Hammond, professor in the Electlc .Yedical
College, says, "and as I cheerfully a preventive recommend lemedy
and a curative Cherokee agent.
Taylor's Mullein.”________ Remedy of Sweet Gutu and
M. Legrand, a wealthy Parisian coopeA who
bought the Legion of Honor, was kieke# out.
Dr. Sago’s Catarrh remedy Remedy cures whenevery
other so-called fails.
There were in the universities of Geimany
during last Winter, 2(1,945 students.
Use Long’s Pearl Tooth Soap for defusing
your teeth. Sc. at Druggists.
I f nlfiicted with > ore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp
son’s Eye- water. Druggists sell at 25c. perbottle.
NERVES! NERVES!!
What terrible visions this little word Iringft
before the eyes of the nervous.
Headache, Neuralgia,
Indigestion, Sleeplessness,
Nervous Prostration,
All stare them in the face. Yet all these nervous
troubles can be cured by using
vt<s (gmbound r y l
For The Nervous
The Debilitated
The Aged.
THIS GREAT NERVE TOW
Also contains the best remedies for diseased con
ditions of the Kidneys, Liver, and Blood, vhich
always accompany nerve troubles.
It is a Nerve Tonic, an Alterative, a Laxative,
and a Diuretic. That is why it
CURES WHEN OTHERS FAIL.
$i.oo a Bottle. Send for full particulars.
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO , Proprietors,
BURLINGTON, VT.
Mason SlHamli
ORGANS.
Highest 100 styles, Honors at all Great World’s Exhibitions Payments, since
$22 to $900. For rash. Easy
Rented. Catalogue, 40 pp„ 4to, free.
PIANOS
Mason A Hamlin do not hesitate to make the extraordln*
claim that their Pianos are superior to all others.
they attribute solely to the remarkable improvement
& HAMLIN by PIANO them in 1882, now known as the “MASON
mail. STRINGER." FuU particulars by
ORGAN&PIANOCO
BOSTON, NEW 154 YORK, Trcmont St. CHICAGO. 149 Wat-ash Av*.
46 Ka*t 14th St. (Colon Square).
m JONES
.isafifeggy
as P* tt» $8 a d*r. Sample, wonh ft.M, FRKB
■% Lines not under the horse's feet. Write
W W Brewster Smsty Rein Holder Co.. Holly. Mich.
m Lira nt anrtV.nir at homa rUe and In make tha more worKl money Flthar working aax C»-»tlyootfl* for a* than
mi. Ter.n» FUkK. AdJra**, Ta IK* Co , Aufu*:*, Maui*,
PlSO'S CURE FOR CONS U MPTI0 N
A Sacred Race.
Cooks of old were considered a sacred
race ; even their fingers were consecrated
The thumb was devoted
middle to V™us, hnger tha j to a f baturn, x fin S er the to next M * rs to - the 8
sun, and the little one to Mercury. Iw
agmation lias so much to do with pleas
ures of, the palate that im; udence con
ceit, and boastfulness were held to be
necessary qualities modest to the profession,
Hear one cook: ‘ 'I may say I
have discovered the principle of imraor
tality and that trie odor ol my dishes
would recall life into the nostrils of the
dead.” Bechamel claimed that with a
sauce he had invented a man would have
no father compunction .—New York in eating his own grand
Press.
We gympa u"L“!GTlfth" C feeHnB which
leads citizens to boast that no oh Id born in
this cou.,try need grow up in ignorance,
yet it is a fact that many people who
learned to read and write have never
themselves to think. A mm who
eyes dropped out, how these and many
diseases have been cured by Dr.
^thi'leSohiSfl’n^teitthe
of this great medicine, his time would
thrown away._
Out of nearly 1,000 applications for license
sell liquor in i ittsbnvg, Pa., 218 got them,
$93 We want Mg in I village, town ar.d township, to
one person uvery
keep !n their homes a line of our AKT samples HAH FLICS those ; who to those call,
who will keep and dimply show these to
we will send, free, the very best revvingMachine manufactured
in the world, with ail tli« attn diluents. This machine is made
after the Hinder patents, which have expired. attachments, Hefure the patents sold
run oat, this style machine, w ith the was for
$'J3; it now sells for Header, it may seem to yoi t the m out
WONDERFUL THING ON KAKTil, but you can secure one : of
these machines absolutely locality, free, provided if will your keep application in
comes in first, from your and you your
home and show to those who call, n set of our elegant and ua
cqualed art samples- We do not ask you to show these sam
ples for more than two months, and (hen they become yoar
own property- The art samples are sent to you ABSOLUTELY
FitEE ol'cost. How ran we do all this?—easily enough! We often
E«*t ns much as $2,000 or $3,000 in trade from even a small
after our art samples have remained where they could be seen
a month or two. We need one person in each locality, all
the country, and take this means of securing them at
Those who write to us nt once, n> ill secure, FREE, the very
Sewing Jlai bins manufactured, and the finest general America. assort
ment of works of high art ever shown together in
particulars FREE by return mail. Write at once; a postal after
on which to write to mi will cost you but one cent, and
know nil, should you conclude to’go need no further, capital—-all why no harm is
dona. Wonderful as it seems, you no
Address at once, TRUE & CO., AUGUSTA, MAUfS.
Do you want *SEaiESS 5 ,e
0 2 < n
mi M'i £ 10 i
.
JI! TOBEltca '
I
c WASIfi
ns 5 g f i' 5
Don’t buy until
||fj find out the
i 11 ^
ft
Savetho ^
Middleman’s
Profits.
QStSend for Catalogue
J. P. STEVENS &
47 Whitehall St., Atlanta,, Ga.
Pi — •~ = ~WWrt~-. ~ i|i:miiiim!ui3iii;i3:iiillllllltm miiti ii1imiiiti!iii1mft5nri;milMiiu.lliiltiu'tnntaiin!imniiiH<rtH;;;:3m;a;;..i-n- m
mm ^V\t^ 0PR1E - T0 «5*0r CaTA^h A 1?
~ U^ A c£s i\emed v
§si S'
!■ .
1 8 llfal i Jf'W I
- m
■
^ For a case of Catarrh in the Head which they cannot cure. V
c
i 5
V 50 CENTS. J ft
'Mi m
inNi-jiNUNNi-.iitvi'.tlwiiiitMUtunmtiiaaaatwirniimUinlii isffxg;- ~
.......................................................................
copyright, ism.]
CATARRH IN THE HEAD.
SY71 {’ JOINS OF THE DISEASE.—Dull, heavy headache,
obstruction of the nasal passages, discharges falling from tho
head into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at
others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody and putrid;
the eyes are weak; there is ringing in tho ears, deafness, hacking
or coughing to clear the throat, expectoration of offensive mat
ter, together “nasal with scabs from ulcers; the voice is changed and
hash there twang"; is the breath of dizziness, is offensive; with smell mental and taste
impaired; sion, hacking cough a sensation and general debility. Only few depres- of tho
a a
above-named symptoms are likely to bo present in any one case.
Thousands of cases annually, without manifesting half of tho
above symptoms, is result in consumption, deceptive and end in the grave. less
No disease so common, more and dangerous,
understood, or moro unsuccessfully treated by physicians.
■■■niniMiaii Common imi SthSE i i a-jj I jj. y 0U wou ]j remove an evil, strike at its
1 s&A*SS impurity, otherwise faulty
8 TfiCATMCHT i nLAi r«r.!5i. S'weakness, I condition of tha system, or in attempting to
cure of that the disease The our chief aim must of this bo
directed to the remora! cause. more we see
odious disease, and we treat successfully thousands of cases an
nually realize at the tho Invalids’ importance Hotel of and combining Surgical with Institute, tho use the of more local, do
we heating a
soothing and blood-cleansing application, tonic a thorough and persistent inter
nal use of and medicines.
OiilEF In eurimr catarrh and all the various diseases with
which it is so frequently complicated, as throat,
Sriipiinp I I bronchia!, and Inns diseases, weak stomach, ca
ntUnnuiL J tarrhal deafness, weak or inflamed eyes, impure
blood, scrofulous and syphilitic taints, the wonder
ful powers and virtues of Dr. Pierce's Golden Med
ical Discovery cannot be too strongly extolled. It has a specific
«tSi2 Size qf pellets.
3 © © ©
© © ©
m if
xll n -*
r.O
PLEASA^ Y WW r T HE original
1TTLE LIVER PILLS.
. §5 Y? 1 PURELY As VEGETABLE! a LIVE It FILL, they PERFECTLY are t’Jieqnaled HARMLESS! t
SMALLEST, CHEAPEST, EASIEST TO TAKE
V Beware of Imitations, which contain Poisonous Minera/s. Always ask for
Dr. Pierce's Pellets, which are little Sugar-coated Pills,
or Anti-bilious Granules. ONE PELLET A DOSE.
Sold by Druggists. SICK HEADACHE,
25 Cents a Vial. Bilinns Headache, Dizziness, Constipation, fc
Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derange- H
ments lieved of and the permanently stomach and cured bowels, by are the promptly use of Dr, re- jf " j
BEING PURELY VEGETABLE, Pierce’s Pellets. In exolanation of their remedial V
■
Dr. Pierce's Pellets operate without disturbance to power over so great a variety of diseases, it may is universal, , , n° . c ,
the system, diet. oeeupation. Put up in glass truthfully be said that their action upon the system
vials, hermetieallv scale,1. Alwivs fresh and relia- gland or tissue escaping their sanative influence.
ble. As a gentle laxative, alterative, or active Manufactured by WORLD’S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION
purgative, they give the most perfect satisfaction. nrtPPALO. U- Vl
That Tired Feeling
at thl;
Is experienced
and many people resort to Hood's sarsaparilla So
drive away the languor and exhaustion. The blood,
laden with Impurities which have been accumulating
for mouths, moves sluggishly through Jthe veins,
the mind falls to think quickly, and the body Is still
slower lo respond. Hood’s Sars ipar 11a a just what
is needed. It purifies, vital zes, and enriches the
blood, makes the head clear, creates an appetite,
overcomes that tired i’celi tones the nervous sys
tem, and imparts new sire.it, tj and vi^or to the
whole body.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
proven to be so va tly supf rlor to r 'By other sarsa
parilla, or bl od purifier, that one ha, well said: “Its
heal.h giving effects uj.on the blood and entire
human organism are as much more positive than the
remedies of a quarter of a century ago as the steam
power of to-dav 13 in advance of the sIjW and labori
ous drudgery of years ago.”
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Solfl by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only I Sold by all druggists. $1six fop $ 5 . Prepared
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mas3. by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Hay.
IOO Doses One Dollar IOO Doses On e Dollar
WELLS’
INVISIBLE mmaM T
Velvet !• ■' _/ SOBS >
Cream.
.
plexion AMagic Beauti Com- 'ye
Her Neck for and Face, Arms
dressing Elegant and for I f§
whitening the iA: '
skin. Unrivaled j
for Theatre,Re- JjSSfe
ceptions, Balls, raNk. V jfsSf’wiisi!Tzl
Parties,&c. equalled for Un- jSBaSg- '• 3
delicate trails- foagjkfcjgj
parent white- —- 1
ness, soft youthf nl effect and fire finish. Harm
less, does injure not tile roughen. draw, wither, nor in any
way most delicate or sensitive skin.
Superior to any Powder. Paste or Liquid for
toning Sunburn, down red or flushed face. Effaces Tan, Sal
low Skin, .Freckles, sll blemishes Pimples, and iinperfections. Coarseness, $1.
bottles at Druggists and Fancy Goods Dealers,
or E. S. by WELLS, Exnress, Chemist, prepaid, on receipt City, N.J..U.S.A. of price.
Jersey
“ROUGH ON NEURALGIA,’’ $1.00. Drug.
“ROUGH ON RHEUMATISM,’’§1.50. Drug.
“ROUGH ON ASTHMA,” $1.50. Druggists.
“ROUGn ON MALARIA,” $1.50. Druggists,
or prepaid by Ev._E. S. AVelis, Jersey City.
ROUGHomCQRNS SOFTCORNS HARD on cn ea
ROUGHonTOQTHACHEMBc
o ThO SHYERS’ GUIDE is
issued March and Sept.,
each year. It is an ency
clopedia of useful infor
mation for all who pur
chase the luxuries or the
necessities of life. "Wo
can clothe you and furnish you with
all the necessary and unnecessary
appliances to ride, walk, dance, sleep,
eat, fish, hunt, work, go to church,
or stay at home, and in various sizes,
styles and quantities. Just figure out
what is required to do ail these things
COMFORTABLY, and you can makes,fair
estimate of the value of the BUYERS
GUIDE, which will be sent upon
receipt of 10 cents to pay postage,
MONTGOMERY WARD & CO.
111-114 Michigan Avenue, Chicago, IU.
gig. isfelfc «= g. tfuttfnjr* By return mtfj. ^ UuH CO* Deseript injt
6 MOODY & Cincinnati, 0.
effect upon the lining mucous membranes of the nasal and
air-passages, an™'restoring promoting ltTo^ts'natural, the natural tMnf S(^LTetion^f ^hcir^tollK'ics“““ healthy
delicate, moist, con
dition. As a blood-purilier, it is unsurpassed. As those aiseR-ts
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.
f "’’"“l As a local application for healing the diseased condi
I | LflO “ f *■ tion all comparison m the head, the Dr. best Sage’s preparation Catarrh Remedy ever inventea. is beyona
i fipCUT , It is mild and pleasant to producing no smarting
MUtnl. use, irritating, or caus
a or pain, and containing no strong, This power
tic drug, or other poison. Remedy is a
ful antiseptic, and speedily destroys all bad smell which accom
panies so many cases of catarrh, thus affording great comtort to
those who suffer from this disease.
Permanent
rq I up the system to a healthy standard, and con -
to. 1 quers throat, bronchial, and lung complications,
" when such exist, but, from its speciM
i n....... lining membrane any nasal it mm
effects upon the of the passages, ulcerated mem
materially in restoring the diseased, thickened, or
brane to a healthy condition, and thus eradicates the disease,
When a cure is effected in this manner it is permanent. PageY
Both Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery and Dr.
Catarrh Remedy are sold by druggists the world over. Discovery cents,
$1.00, six bottles for $5.00. Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy 50
half-dozen bottles $2.50. hints ns , tc
clothing, A complete diet, and Treatise other on matters Catarrh, giving importance, valuable will be madea
of stamp.
post-paid to any address, on receipt of a 2-cent postage
Address, World’s Dispensary Medical Association)
No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N.Y
Ufce Hood's Sarsaparilla to expel Lnr,';7' 4
accumulate In the blood durlnj the mo
strength as warm weather oomes ""
petite and on. c
p omote healthy digs,don t„
Sarsaparilla ' ”
and you will be conduce! — ■ o:a,.
lar merits. It , is , the , Ideal spring medlclnjlj
beneficial, pleasa..t lo .ake, aad gives
tbe money.
" Itak - Hood's Sarsaparilla as a spring toy,
recommend feeling. ' C. It Paiuielee, to all who have that street mL-T ft?
319 Brii g0
Make the Weak Stro "S
"My appetite was poor, 1 could not sV
headache a great deal, pains in my ta-k j
did short not time move did regularly. much Bond’s' Sarsapum!
m so g od that I fee] m., *
man. My rains and aches tr.‘ relieve i mv
improved. I say to others try H iort’a **
G. F. Jackson, Roxbury Station, Conti,
DR.KILMER’S
ed.
■rp
\
tli
r wM Jj l
«. .. ^
si
O^ATfOV aV /4
if Yf»ilV heart KomJcLv thumps Win at
tev sudden effort
II lUUl beats or flutters, if you have
disease, taint spells, lits or spasms.
If U Vrtll i U U lcel around !l3 the though heart, water or have was heart rat!* dn
if II Vflll I UU oars, have Vertigo, disposed dizzy to nervous attacks, ring'
appoploxy, shock sudden death, prosti
or
if Ocean-Weed You SSfpSS:
cures and prevents going to
Prepared at Dispensary. Binghamton. “GUIDE TO HEAL
Kent Free. N. Y.
DRUGMtSTtS. I’RHE $1
g mm fits
When, i any cure I do not them mean merely to atop
fora time and then have the return again, I a
radical cure. 1 have made disoane of FITS, I
EPSY or FALLING SICKNESS a lifelong**
warrant, iny remedy to cure tbe worst cases. Decs
others have failed is no reason for not now receirin
cure, friend at once for ft treatise and i* Free Bo
of n?y 6 infallible remedy. Give Express and PostUfi
U. . HOOT* 1 U« CL. 183 Pearl 8 t. NewYci
one-lialf, GINN ERSj by*ordering HSiSSE; of the ChicagoSej
or more, useful articles, wield
Co. 1,W0 other at less than
prices. Catalogue FilEE. Agents l*E and Dealerssupplii
Address C lilt'ACO SC A CO., ChicacoJ
Biair’s Box, Pilis. 34i K£££
Oval round, 14 Puls.
1 O I * I> is worth $500 per lb. Pettit’s EyeSw
worth $1,000. but is sold at 25c. abixbyda;
A. N. U... . ...Eiehltm,