Newspaper Page Text
AGRICULTURAL.
TOP )l£? INTEREST UEIiATIVE
TO FARM AND GARDEN.
Hints on Corn Planting.
In corn-planting time the farmer is
worried by many pests. Crows and
blackbirds pull up the sprouting seed,
and if this is truly done in pursuit of
nefarious cutworms and pestilent grubs
the damage is in no way mollified or les
sened. Squirrels and chipmunks dig up
the seed and cutworms sever the tender
sprouts. It is useless and unreasonable
to complain when simple and effective
precautions are ignored and neglected,
beed stirred in just sufficient hot water
in. which a tablespoon of tar has been
with film , Agnation to coat each grain
a of the tar will not be attacked
by crows, or cutworms, or squirrels. We
have steeped the seed in a solution of
saltpetie in hot water, with the result of
and hastening thus the germination by two days,
chief by lessening the danger of mis
these pests, and by adding a
few chops of carbolic acid to the quart
of solution the odor of the seed becomes
too offensive for all the com
,
mon pests combiner]. The custom
of planting corn in the South,
singly feet in tho rows, and the rows three
yield. apart, The undoubtedly decreases the
the South is average yield of this crop
in less than half of that of the
New England States, and 15 or 20
bushels of grain per acre is considered a
very good crop. By growing three
ears where one is now grown it is prob
able that, the yield would be increased
in proportion, and thus the prevailing
method in the Southern States of drop
ping three seeds at every three feet in
the rows might be adopted by the South
era farmers with advantage. While it
is not always safe to counsel changes in
the common practice, yet the writer,
after four years’ actual experience in
factorily (arming in tho South, has proved satis
the ordinary by his own success iu trebling
yield of the crops that iin
piovemcnt in methods is quite possible.
Better plowing, more thorough hurrow
ing, thicker planting, more liberal ma
nuring, longer-continued cleaner and more frequent and
entire freedom from cultivation, and the
weeds would so
much increase the yield of crops in the
South us to enrich tlio farmers iu a few
years. -^Neto York Times.
Cull lire of Beans.
There are two or three counties in
Western New York where beans are
grown to an enormous extent and the
farmers have become rich by their sale.
There seems to be no special reason why
this crop should have been adopted in
this section. We have millions of acres
of similar soil and climate where beans
are seldom grown. If leguminous crops
get their nitrogen from the atmosphere,
the farms where beaus are grown so
largely and tho vines fed out to sheep
ought to be very rich. We do not learn
that such is the case. In fact, it is
claimed by some that beans prove to bo
an bean exhausting crop, and that the old
growers are not making as much
money Beans as formerly.
are at the present time brought
from Europe in bags right into the heart
of the bean-growing section of Western
New York, where they are put in barrels
and shipped as “New Fork State beans.”
From this it is evident that our bean
growers have an established reputation
which the dealers are not slow to utilize.
It also indicates that beans can be
grown in other places. We have known
many fanners undertake to raise beans
for the first time who made a failure of
it. They generaly plant when beans aro
high, and anticipating largo profits put
in twice as many acres as they are able
to take care of. Beaus must bo kept
clean. But too much hoeing and culti
vating words, does not suit them, In other
we need clean land to start with,
or we must plant on sod turned over with
a planting. “jointer” plow immediately before
On such land the beans get a
good growth before the weeds start, and
but little hoeing and cultivating aro
necessary. The
Western bean-planter commonly used iu
New York is drawn by one
horse. It makes two rows at a time,
twenty-nine inches apart, and drops live
or six beans in tho lulls about fifteen or
eighteccn inches apart. Tho machine
covers tho beans, and the whole work is
done at one operation. If there are hard
clay spots which the machine does not
cover with completely, hoe,putting the work must be done
a two inches of fine soil
ou the beans. Instead of using a bean
planter many good farmers put iu tho
beans with an ordinary grain drill, sow
ing three rows at a time, twenty-eight
inches apart, the’rows. and dropping two inches
apart in They claim a larger
yield, but it is, possiblv, a little more
work to keep them clean, and certainly
more work to pull them than when
in hills.
Beans are a profitable crop, and it
seems a pitvthut wo should ever have to
import them from Europe. But let us
again plant urge any of our readers who mav
them for tho first time to select
good clean land, plow carefully, and
harrow and roll till the surface is as mcl
thorough low ns a harrowing garden. The advantage of
ciated. is not always ’ appre- 1 ‘
Cultivate between the rows frequently,
but not too deep, with a tine-tootlied
steel horse hoc that will kill every weed
and leave the surface smooth aud fine.
Many of our corn cultivators are too
coarse and leave the land weather! too rough, so
that it dries out iu hot and
growth of the beans is checked. The
rule in regard to planting is to put in
the planted beans as soon as possible Agriculturist. after corn is
.—American
Farm anil Garden Notes.
„rr’3,: , F , ,z„: r ket •" ^
plucked from tlio turkey. rit
Lew wagons with wide tires make
easier work in hauling out manure.
The only way to learn farming or any
other trade is to serve an apprenticeship
to it.
For valuable fertilizing purposes there is no
more form of potash than wood
ashes.
A farmer says that you can feed a ho^
so death. long on corn that you will starve it to
■NT*® ... **i° ...
sheen if vnu kh P net t i s-u *1 mbS 81
a K profit '
An acre of . corn-fodder ... well manured
will furnish ensilage enough to keep two
Hr* a J* ar >
Gather the droppings around under
the roosts every two or three days if you
would have your poultry free from'th*
scourge of scaly legs.
In very hot summers, quince bushes,
grapevines, and many other plants destoved given
greatly to root weakened very superficially by having are their shallow or
earth. feeding-roots parched up iu the surface
For growing cucumbers, squashes sawdust or
other similar plants, put old or
rotten wood about them. Those who
have never tied cucumbers ou strong,
bushy stakes, like pea sticks, will bo
surprised to note how they enjoy it.
Whatever is done in the small fruit
line, it is a safe and wise rule to put out
no more plants than can be properly
cared for. It docs not pay to prepare
land, buy plants, set them, and leave
th *m to be choked with weeds.
Many people can safely drink sour
milk, while their stomachs are too weak
to digest that which is still sweet. This
is true of animals. The calf put upon a
diet of slightly soured milk may scour,
but it is usually not from the sourness of
the milk, but from its lower tempera
ture. A pailful or half full of cold, sour
milk chills the digestive organs, and
diarrhoea is the only way in which the
stomach can dispose of its incubus.
Carrageen, or Irish Moss.
“Years ago the markets of the world
were supplied with this farinaceous and
gelatinous seaweed entirely from the
coast of Ireland, hence it's name,” said
a New York druggist to a Sun reporter,
“About twenty years ago, however, the
discovery was made that as good earra
geen grew on the rocks along the Massa
chusetts coast as ever clung to those
washed by the Irish surf; and now there
are colonies of men at various points
along that coast who make it their sole
business to collect the moss and prepare
it for market. The trade in Irish moss
was formerly entirely confined to the
grocers, and how it came to be one of
the regular articles on sale in drug stores
I am unable to say. It probably came
medicinal about through qualities the discovery in composition of valuable
the of
the weed—iodine being one—aud from
the fact that it was found to be an ex
ccllent substitute ;for arrowroot, sago,
and other farinaceous substances, in
valuable] in the sick room. Formerly
carrageen was only utilized as a gelati
nous article of food, and it did service
only in the popular jellies and blanc
mango of the table. Analysis finally re
vealed that this toothsome, sea-llavorcd
weed, tossed by the waves and seasoned
by their salt, contained starch of the
most excellent quality. This farnia is
not only unexcelled for nutritive
purposes, but a starch that surpasses all
others for fine laundryiug is extracted
from the weed
“The , trade m Irish moss from the
Massachusetts coast is controlled by one
or two Boston firms. The gatherers of
tho moss are mostly Irishmen. They
start out in dories long before daylight,
and a boat will frequently travel twenty
miles in tho course of a day before it is
filled with the succulent weed. The moss
clings to the rocks tenaciously, and to
detach it and drag it in thc boats long
handled, iron rakes dredge-shaped, used. When sharp-toothed tlio
are moss
gatherers bon return with their clay’s eollec
it Is sorted over, for there are as many
grades of the weed as there are of leaf
tobacco. Tho whitest of the moss is
selected for tho starchmakers. When a
load is sorted, the different kinds are
spread on thc beach, out of reach of the
tide, to dry and bleach in the sun and
wind.
“This requires fiom ten days to two
market, weeks. Tlio moss is then ready for tho
and is packed in barrels. The
moss gatherers of the South Massachu
setts coast LVrhr^’i.'r.Soy.wh.’ are probably thc only persons
welcome ocean storms. The reason for
that is that a storm brings money to their
pockets, and saves them days of labor.
After every storm at sea the coast will
be thickly strewn for miles with Irish
moss, which the violence of storm-torn
waves has forced from its hold on the
rocks, and which is swept upon the
shore by thc incoming surf.”
All Aeronaut’s Awful Drop, ‘
‘ ,, T . >s . claimed , . . , by Ihe balloonist, ,
aldw ‘“- th at lie has dropped uOOO feet
r°m a balloon , with a parachute. I shall
1 ro U at feet, anij shall
attempt what no other balloonist ever
f '“"“g ld *. 1 11 enUrc dro ,P ly " t0 !t the ' thc » . ir c, to ‘ utc open clos f the d >
c * lu tc.
bo sal,i Edward D. Ilogan to a group
newspaper men, who had assembled
at Jackson, Mich., on a large vacant lot
to see lum make hisfoolhardy venture.
After lie stepped in the ear and gave
orders lor tb e ropes holding thc aerial car
to the ground be cast off, the balloon
f!’/ Vn!! y U ! P almost straight It then to a settled distance about of
feet ftod liuni^ like u bull in the
Ravens of P eo P‘ 0 Tho on anxious the ground aud ex watched ited crowd the
balloon "' ltlx , hated breath. The re
passes, P or,crs we and £° provided with powerful
saw Ilogan make ready to
u n
11 weaken, said . some one.
“No,” cried another, “he is getting
ou jh” rho .?, h ut<: was closed. Hogan drew
11 . tnl , he reached the to which
U P ropes
lashed himself, lie did not expect
^ 10 c h u * e open lor the first 200 or
and he was afraid he might be
shaken olT thc bar b >' thc rapidity of
the fall unless he took the precaution to
bls ^ ett himself. AN hen he stepped on the
ed S° of the oar to s P lin S? °“ space
some of the spectators grew pale and
sick. certain Surely death. this daring man was going
to
he fell fir 500 feet. The chute k.s not
yet- opened. elongated Down bird. it came like a
gigantic like He was falling
a meteor, and the spectators shut
their eyes while still keeping their
glasses elevated. Suddenly a shout goes
U U' ^ be chute has caught the air. It
°U cns , ikc L tbe win S® of a monster eagle,
Hogan's ed . night downward was almost
st0 PP witb a jerk. Then the chute
sett ‘ cs dowtl to a steady journey earth
ward with its passenger, and in three
minutes from the time the reckless m n
t^ e ba ii° on he landed sately in an
°P en field s °me little distance from where
ascent was made.— -Globe-Democrat,
__________ _ ______
The friendship of the artful is mere
self interest.
Chinese Ginners.
Consul Peters, of Ningpo, says the on
ly large cotton gins are situated in Ning
P°- The cotton is separated from the
see< I by the use of hand-power treadle
gins, manufactured in Japan. They are
worked eighteen hours a day, and in
that time turn out 240 pounds of seed
gin. cotton, or 80 pounds of lint cotton per
These contrivances, although prim
itive, are superior to the little treadle
fP ns usf; d Gy the cotton growers. Steam
power is now being introduced to work
the gins with. The Chinese gins clean
the seed better than the American saw
£? n \ The cotton ginned retains the en
ton ‘ lr<; ^ength from the of seed. the fibre; Cotton it pulls is purchased the cot
by buyers in the cotton growing sections
and shipped to Ningpo to be ginned.
When ginned the cotton is packed in
ffks “ S I nrt weighing "W 160 pounds half The to staple five
-
, hths . f Cot, balc3
c, « ‘ otl
i ,ja 10 . ’ 1 e P. ac as ' c ^ bulky tightly, as a bale and a of 160-pouw American
cotton. The pr.ee paid for the cotton in
April, 1888, was < ^ cents a pound ginned,
Most of the cotton ginned in Ningpo is
manufactuced into cotton goods in China,
One American 100-saw gin would do the
wor ^ °f twelve of the hand-power gins
used in Ningpo. The chief profit in (lie
ginning of cotton seems to be in the
selling of of seed. The seed sell at about the
rate 00 cents to .$1.12 per bushel.
The seed when sold is used in the manu
facture of oil lor fertilizing and for feed
,n o stock.
Certain of Success.
Patient (to young Sawbones, who is
about to cut off his arm.—“Doyou think
ihe operation will ke successful, doc
tor.”
Young Sawbones—“Of course it will;
III have that arm off in less than tne
minutes.”
The spooks and goblins that delight
To till with terror all the night:
That stalk abroad in hideous dreams
With which dyspepsia’s fancy teems,
Mill never trouble with iheirills
The man who trusts in Pierce’s Pills.
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellets:—
vegetable,harmless, painless, su.e!
Tho Union League Club of New York will
raise $500,000 to complete Grant’s monument.
fonvcmionai ” Monon » Resolution*,
By-Co.) Whereas, The M .non Kouto (L. N. A. & <\
desires to make it known to the world
winter cities of Florida a 1 <1 the summer re
un<1
J: ete$nt ,„ ‘SSuiTet
ami mr Chair sirt.’its Pullman Steeper
ear service between Chicago amt
Jq,laBedl®ind. ii /cmw, Its d ' anap0li8 aud Cincinuatl an
rates are as lowas the lowest!
T uh„h....... 0 . . ar n (§.°Mc“
trip it is good p<./icjj 1 toeon-mt wita K.
Gonnick, D, arbor, Gen Chicago, Pass. Agent lor Monon Route, 185
’ l St.. full particulars. (In
any event send for a Tourist Guide, enclose 4c.
P' si-igr.)
_
| WHY?
!
j
j WHY do I have this drowsy,
.
lifeless feeling ? WHY do 1 have
Backache ? WHY Neuralgia and
Rheumatism? WHY doesScroful
ous taint and Erysipelas show
itself?
BECAUSE your IUustbeCom^ blood is filled
with Poison, ’ which
pletely ... „ Eradicated . before you
can the regain health. You must go to
root of the matter. Put the
Kidneys—tho great aud only blood
purifying ■ * organs—in • complete - order
is complete UeaUb, audwth
.
WARNER’S SAFE GORE
and WARNER’S SAFE PIEES
J®*** - C ure is . Certain.
WHY do wo ? know this ?
BECAUSE tens of thous
amis of grate- ful men and
women in all parts of the
world have m voluntarily
written US to this effect.
There is no Standstill in
disease. You are either growing
Better or Worse How is it with
,
WHY not to-day resort to that
medicine,which has veritably Cur
*“ - . juni!soils; 1 ami which ? rfTaioS will cure
>ou-t .>ou Mill ii give it a chance 9
.
All ot \V arnor S preparations are
Purely Vegetable. They They 'time-tried. are made
on honor . are
They arc No New Discovery.un- jt”
tried mid w-ortlilcss ; on the con
trarv, they havo stood the test—
they hax'6 proved their superiority,
They stand alone in pre-eminenf
vwr KXO>v 1X#
© The BUYERS’ 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 tha
necessities of life. Wo
can elotho you and furnish you with
all the necsssary and unnecessary
appliances to rido, walk, dance, sleep,
cat, 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 all these things
COMFORTABLY, and you can make a lair
estimate of tho value of the BUYEHS’
GUIDE, which will be sent upon
receipt of 10 cents to pay postage,
MONTGOMERY WARD & CO.
1H-114 Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Ill.
ROANOKE
*<W Cotton and Haj
yUs Hckbbkds Tl\e Rales best cotton and in cheapest fasto- itftijpAND actual than made. use. any
»,
•» ‘ XV ’ ! \ WOODWORKS for our Cot*
ton end Hay Press circulars.
- Ch»tiiuioofcn, Tenn. Box _6u
“OSGOOD”
, 7. 8. Otitiiri 2:Les.
_ A Sent on trial. Freight
'’iSy paid. FuiiyWarranted. $35.
3 TON
Other sirci proportion*
ately lew. Agents well psid. Illustrated Catalogue
free. Mention this Paper.
QS30SS & TSOUPSOS, SiBgbmtec, U. Y.
Worili Knowing.
That Allcock’s Porous Plasters are the
highest result of medical science and skill, and
In ingredients and method have never been
equaled. original and genuine
That they are the por
ous plasters upon whose reputation imitators
trade.
That Allcock's Porous Plasters never
fail to perform their remedial work quickly
and effectually.
That for Weak Back, Rheumatism, Sciatica,
Colds, Lung Trouble, Kidney Difficulties, Ma
laria, Dyspepsia, Liver and Stomach Affec
tions, Strains and all Local Pains, they are in
valuable.
That when you buy Allcock’s Porous
Plasters you obtain the best plasters made.
The best way to make a balky horse go, is to
sail him at once.
_
A Prominent .Urreliant in Trouble*
Old moneybags mopes in his office all day.
As snappish and eross as a bear; out of , his .
The clerks know enough ;o keep
Lest "*lh’e merchant should grumble and
swear. is in fear of cuff,
Even Tabby, the cat, a
Or a kick, if she ventures t>o near; be
They all know the master :s apt and to rougn,
And his freaks unexpected queer.
What makes the old fellow so surly and grim,
And behave so c nfoundediy m ?an?
There’s certainly something the matter with
him—
Is it stomach, it—his or liver, or spleen? sluggish had.
We've guessed liver is ana
His biood is disordered • ud foul.
It's enough to make anv one hopelessly growl. mad.
And greet his best friend with a
The world-wide remedy, Dr. Pierce’s Golden
MedicJ J Discovery, will correct a disordered
liver and parity the blood, tone your system
and build up your flesh and strength.
one-third Of the 10,000 piano New makers in the country,
live in York city.
^.Paines ^elery
' J °fgnbsund
For The Nervous
The Debilitated
The Aged
fa M«r URKS Nervous Prostration,Nervous Head.
—ache,Neuralgia, Nervous Weakness,
Stomach and Liver Diseases, and all
affections of the Kidneys.
AS A NERVE TONIC, It Strengthens
and Quiets the Nerves.
AS AM ALTERATIVE, ItPurifles and
Enriches the Blood.
AS A LAXATIVE, It acts mildly, but
qurcly, on the Bowels.
AS A DIURETIC, It Regulates the Kid
neys and Cures their Diseases.
Recommended by professional and businessmen.
Price $i,oo. Sold by druggists. Send for circulars.
IV ELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Proprietors,
BURLINGTON, VT.
X SKI ” WELL
D^ELL
All enttings of tho drill in clay, sand, gravel, rock, &c ,
are discliurged at surface without removing
tools. Noted for success where others fail. Drill
drop* 70 to DO times LOOMIS a minute. NYMAN, Profits large.
Catalogue Free. &
TSFFih!, OHIO.
w\ V 0 Plp'C; AV <:
'A 1 I J 1 TH^
i i:
m£D liver.,blood IKjgg V ‘W^ a < i^yo u!
LuflG
ARE YOU SICK?
Do yon fool dull, languid, low-spirited,
lifeless, physically and indescribably miserable, both
of fullness and mentally: bloating experience alter eating, a
sense or
or of “ goneness,” or emptiness of stomach
in the morning, tongue coated, bitter or
bad taste in mouth, irregular appetite, diz
ziness, frequent headaches, blurred eye
sight, “floating specks” before tho eyes,
nervous prostration or exhaustion, irrita
with bility of temper, hot flushes, alternating
sient pains chilly here sensations, there, sharp, biting, drow- tran
and cold feet,
siness after meals, wakefulness, or dis
turbed and unrefreshing sleep, constant,
EZri uiLludO | ious attack, fluttering of the heart, SSSltt poor rest at
£411 ftTTarw nun. B | night, Medical etc., Discovery’ I commenced and ‘Pellets,’ the use of and your derived ‘Golden the
................. very highest beneflt therefrom.”
«FOU THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.”
the Thoroughly fountain cleanse health, the blood, by using which is
of Dr.
Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery,
and good digestion, a fair skin, buoyant
spirits, be and bodily health and vigor will
established.
Golden Medical Discovery euros all
A medicine possessing the power to cure such inveterate blood and skin diseases as the following testimonial portrays, must
certainly be credited with possessing Salt-rheum. properties capable of curing any and all skin aud blood diseases, for none are more
obstinate or difficult of cure than
“ Columbus, Ohio, Aug. 18th,
Q Ai T DUrHU ,, WORLD’S dispensary Medical Associa
UMLl*n!iOi?I «
g tion, 6ti3 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y.:
AIIO Gentlemen —For several years I have felt it
to be my duty to give to you the facts in rela
Rheumatism. tion vated to ease the of complete salt-rheum, cure by of the a most use of aggra- your
‘Golden Medical Discovery. An salt-rhcum elderly' iady for
relative of mine had been a great sufferer from distressing in her
upwards of forty years. The disease was most
hands, causing the skin to crack open on tho inside of the fingers
at the joints and between the fingers. plasters, She was salves, obliged ointments to protect
the raw places by means of adhesive and
bandages, aud during tho winter months had to have her hands
dressed daily. The pain was quite severe at times and her general
health was'badly affected, paving the way for other diseases to
creep in. Catarrh and rheumatism caused a great deal of suffering
in audition to the salt-rheum. She had used faithfully, and with
the most commendable perseverance, all tho remedies prescribed
by her physicians, but without drinking obtaining teas made relief. from She blood-purify- afterwards
began treating herbs. herself by continued this for several but de
ing roots and She years
rived no beneflt. Finally, about ten years ago, I chanced to read
one of Dr. Pierce’s small pamphlets ’ and other setting medicines. forth The the merits struck of his
• Golden Medical Discovery name
WEAK SPITTING OP BLOOD.
Golden Medical Discovery cures Con
sumption (which is Scrofula of the invigora- Lungs),
by its wonderful blood-purifying, properties. For Weak
ting and nutritive
I Consumption I h nQ To
| WUAOUmr 1 lun. | imve tne wnis
express my gratitude for the good your
‘Golden Medical Discovery’ has done my
wife. She was taken with consumption, and after trying one doc
tor after another 1 finally gave up all hope of relief. Being very
poor and having but one dollar in the world. I prayed to God that
he might show me something: and then it seems as though some
thing did tell me to got vour * Golden Medical Discovery.’ My
wife took it as directed, and as a result she is so she can work now.’ ’
O.Wasting LA NED Disease.— Watson F. Clarke. Esq.,
of (Box IOO, Sum When merside. I Prince Edward Inland.
25 POUNDS R Gam, writes: ” commenced taking your
a.v 1 “ u,,uo ' Golden Medical Discovery,” I was not dble to
* WO rk and was a burden to myself. At that time
I weighed 122 pounds, and to-day I weigh H7
pounds. Then I used to eat about one meal a day, and now can
eat four or five if I dared to.”
WORLD’S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Propr’s, No. 663 Main St., BUFFALO, N. Y.
What it Means.
To the man or won,an who has never been
ill, the word “health’ is meaningless. But to
the one who has suffered and despaired,
health appears as a priceless boon. To the
thousands of unfortunate women who are suf
fering from irregulirities some of the peculiar many forms of weak
ne.-ses or to their s-x,
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription holds forth
the promise of a speedy restoration of this
"pric. les boon.”
I.e Bouef, the French marshal whose incom
petency ruined Napoleon 111, died recently.
Music Teachers’ Convention, Chicago,
First week in July. All Southern Music
Teachers and their friends desiring to attend
can secure rates of one and one-third fare for
round trip by addressing H. A. Hathaway, Louis
Dist. Passenger Agent Monon Route,
ville, Kentucky.
5??
Health and Strength
If you feel tired, weak, worn out or run down
from hard work, by impoverished condition of
the blood, or low state of the system, you should
take Hood’s Sarsaparilla. The peculiar toning-,
purifying and vitalizing qualities of this successful
medicine are soon felt throughout the entire sys
tem, expelling disease and giving quick, healthy
action to every organ. It tones the stomach,
creates an appetite, and rouses the liver and
kidneys. Thousands w ho have taken it with
benefit, testify that Hood’s Sarsaparilla “ makes the
weak strong.”
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
iOO Doses One Dollar
Do you want “SSS?iiSiSS 1 * Inspirator?
-its f |as
3 *
c. fiS Firifii fulfil
M'ljiM Wes
WATER -«K8£
SUBFLY viwiie m n
t/l H
TO 1 m
SUCCESSORS i (r - v 0 P 0*
WHITE V) ►■a
H*
w 0 \\-» IT.
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© C.
a TRADE MARK.
JOHN T. LEWIS & BEOS.,
WARRANTED PURE
While Lead, Red Lead, Litharge, Orange
Mineral, Painters’ Colors and Linseed Oil.
CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED.
GINSENG AND RAW SKINS
Bought for cash at highest market prices. Send for
circular. OTTO WAGNER, 90 Prince St., New York.
KEUBHAfiD FIFTH WHEEL
Uuvrovciaont. URRUIiAiSD GO., Vr.moai, O.
Bent to each one. Address Record Co., Buchanan, Ga.
TEXAS LANDS:
Address.GODEE Y l»ORTER,DaIlas,Tex,
f' 1 OLD is worth $500 per lb. Pettit’s Eye Salve is
\DT worth $1,000. but is sold at 25c. a box by dealers.
[COI’YBIGUT, 1687.)
indescribable feeling of dread, or of im
pending calamity? have ail, considerable
If you or any
number of these symptoms, you are
suffering from that most common of
American maladies—Bilious Dyspepsia, or
Torpid Indigestion. Liver, associated Thc with complicated Dyspepsia,
or more
your disease has become, the greater the
number and diversity of symptoms. No
matter what stage it has reached, Dk.
Fikrce’s Golden Medical Discovery
will subdue it, if taken according to di
rections for a reasonable length of time.
If not cured, of complications the multiply and
Consumption Rheumatism, Lungs, Skin Diseases,
Heart Disease, Kidney Dis
ease, or other grave maladies are quite
Liver Mrs. I. V. Webber, “For of Yorkshire, Cattaranuus to
Cn., K. Y., writes: Discovery’ five years and previous ’Pellets,
taking ‘Golden Medical
Disease. I was a great sufferer; had a severe pain in my
right side continually; was unable to do my own
■g aw B BBi w miMw W work. I am now well and strong.”.
humors, from a common Blotch, or Erup
tion, Fever-sores,” to the worst Scrofula. Rough Salt-rheum, Skin,
“ Scaly or blood, in
short, ail diseases caused by bad are
conquered by this powerful, purifying, and
invigorating medicine. Great Eating Ul
cers rapidly heal under its benign influ-
my fancy, and seeing that it -was essentially a blood-purifier, I im
sufferer mediately from recommended salt-rheum. it to She the commenced old lady who taking had it been at so long and a
bottle, oner, realized
took one but seemed to be no better. However, I
that it would take time for any medicine to effect a change for Die
better, half-a-dozen and encouraged her to continue. She then purchased a
notice improvement. bottles, and before those had all been used she began she
to an Al ter taking about a dozen bottles
was entirely cured. Her hands were perfectly well and as smooth
and improved; healthy the as rheumatism a child’s. Her entirely general left health was also catarrh greatly
almost cured, that ceased to much her, and the She was has
so it be annoyance.
enjoyed excellent health from that day to this, and has had no
return of either salt-rheum or rheumatism. The ‘Discovery
seems to have entirely eradicated the salt-rheum from her of system. such
She is now over eighty' years old, and very healthy for one
extreme age.
I have written this letter, of which you can make any' use you to
see fit, hoping that some sufferer from salt-rheum might chance
read it and obtain relief by using your ‘Golden Medical Discovery
—for ‘Golden’ it is in its curative properties, and as much above
the multitude of nostrums and so-called ‘patent medicines, so
zealously flaunted before the public, as gold is above the basei
metals. Respectfully vours,
F. W. Wheeler, 182 21st St.”
Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Shortness of
Breath, Bronchitis, Chronic Nasal Catarrh,
Severe Coughs, Asthma, and kindred nffee
tions, it is a sovereign remedy. While it
Cough Mrs. N. W. Rice, of Nevfano, Vermont.
of says: “I feel at liberty to acknowledge ol
the benefit I received from two bottles
Five Years’ the a cough ‘Golden of five Medical years’ Discovery,’ standing, which and dyspep- cured
Standing. sia. from which 1 had suffered for a long
time. I have also used Dr. Fierce’s Extract
of Smart-Weed, or Water Pepper, in my
family, with good effect.”
Worth nunin Si eiuuu 000 . GoWen Medical ^i^ia^takln^o^vMSSui Discovery’ and have been
H A PftTTIC DU l I Lfc. cured well, and of consumption. have only spent I am three now dollars, sound ano ana
I would not take three thousand dollars an
be put back where I was.”
Discovery Sl.OO, six Bottles for $5.00; by Druggist*'
P)«PS^Scaim are cured by
Oil
JRliGGISJS ^MPTt^p^FECTlf AND DEALER EvEf^te
TheChaS’A’VdgelerCo-BaltqHd
WELLS’ BBialSSg
Velvet*!' INVISIBLE pysfaHMs g t-y =d
w.
Cream.! §ro«*. jpg <3
plexion AMagicCom- Beauti
r -
tier Neck for and Arms Face, IjjgT (ef
dressing Elegant f o r fjf gj§:
and %
skm. whitening the RSfe
Unrivaled
for ceptions, Theatre.Re- Balls. t %
equalled Parties,&o. Un
for
delicate trans
parent soft white
less, ness, youthful effect and fine finish. Harm
does not roughen draw, wither, nor in any
way injure the most delicate or sensitive s!,%
toning Superior to any Powder, Paste or Liquid tor
down red or flushed face. Effaces Tan.
bottles at Druggists and Fancy Goods Dealers'
“ROUGH ON NEURALGkV r i : im~B™:
“ROUGH ON RHEUMATISM,”$1.50.Drug
“ROUGH ON ASTHMA,” $1.50. Druggists.
Biwweji!»
RODfiHoMCORKSsorToHgs I .fc
ROMGHowTOOT HS CHE'SS 1 1 Be
TMARVeUMMI
DISCOVERY.
Wholly Cure of unlike in <il wnnderiuir* ai’tiilcinl systems.
in
Any book learned m one reading.
Classes of 1087 f-t Baltimore, 1005 at Detroit.
Boston, Philadelphia, largo of 1113 Columbia at Washington, Law students,
classes at
University, Wellesley, Oberlin, Chautauqua, University «fcc., &c. of Penn., Endorsed Mich
Proctor, t he Scientist. Hons. W. W. Astou, by
P. Benjamin, Judge Gibson, Dr. Brown, E.
Cook, Principal N. Y. State Normal College, »’cc.
by IPROF. correspondence. LOISET I E. Prosnectus 237 Fifth Ave.. port N. fukl* Y.
$100 to $300 JiKWS furnish their
us. Agents preferred who can business. own
horses and pive their whole time to the
Spare moments may re profitably employed also.
A few vacancies in towns and cities. B. F. JOHN
SON & CO.. 1013 Main st., Ktchmoud. Va.
OSasimJa Hlaii S rlliii Great English Gout aw
Rheumatic Remedy.
Oval Box, 34; louud, PiiN.
m Live at home and make more money working for us than
I at anything else in the world. Hither sex. Costly Maine. outfit
FREE. Terms fkke. Address, True & CO., Augusta,
m to $8 a day. Samples worth $1.50, FREE
Lines not under the horse’s feet. Write
Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co., Holly. Mich.
N. U....... Twenty-five, ’88
liable to set in, and, sooner or later, in
duce a fatal termination.
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discov
ery acts powerfully upon tho Liver, and
through cleanses the that system great blood-purifying of all blood-taints organ, and
impurities, from whatever cause arising. the
It is equally efficacious in acting upon
Kidneys, and other excretory organs, their
cleansing, strengthening, and healing
diseases. As an appetizing, restorative
tonic, it promotes digestion and nutri- and
tion, thereby building up both flesh
strength. In malarial districts, this won
derful medicine lias gained great celeb
rity in curing Fever and Ague, Clnlls
and Fever, Dumb Ague, and kindred
diseases.
ence. Virulent blood-poisons are, by its
use, has it robbed manifested of their terrors. Especially in curing
its potency
Tetter, Eczema, Erysipelas, Boils, Carbun- SiveiJ
eles, Sore Hip-joint Eyes, Disease, Scrofulous .Sores Swellings,’ und
ings, Goitre, Thick “White Enlarged Glands.
or Neck, and
promptly cures the severest Coughs, il
strengthens the system and purifies the
blood,