Jones County headlight. (Gray's Station, Ga.) 1887-1889, July 28, 1888, Image 4

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AGRICULTURAL IOPICJ8 OF INTEREST RELATIVE TO FARM AND GARDEN. To Tell the* Age of Horses. To tell the age of any horse, Inspect The the lower jaw, of course; six front teeth the tale will tell, And every doubt and fear dispel. Two middle “nippers” you behold Rot ore the colt is two weeks old: Before eight weeks two morn will come; Eight months the “corners” cut the guin. Tho outside grooves will disappear From middle two in just one year; In two years from the second pair. In three the corners, too, are hare. At two the middle “nippers” drop, At three the second pair can’t stop; When four years old the third pair goes, At live a full new set he shows. The deep black spot* will pass from view At six years from the middle two; " he second jiafr at eight seven years, At thy spot each “comer” clears. From middle “nippers” upper jaw At, nin'e the black spots will withdraw; 1 he'second pair at ten are white; LI'-veil finds the "corners” light. As time goes on, the horsemen know, The oval teeth three sided grow; They Till longer get, project before twenty, when we know no more. — Mari/land Farmer. To Manage Sitting Hens. To manage sitting hens, Fanny Field (good bu authority), in Poultry Keeper says lt t much use to set hens where the laying lunscap get at Ilmm; but, bless yon, you ice nt wait until your hens Si . J] to‘sit‘p,, “them r° U w a'“godd hC Wi,y hens offer h 1 place,” and make them sit, there. Won’t slay? Yes they will, too, if you manage them ri"•lit ° How to manage them our authority ways, to begin with, have a place for your sitiing in, hens where the laying hens can’t get or the sitters get out Such , by a place can be made at a 1 i dling expense putting house. a temporary partition in your bottomless poultry For nests make some boxes eighteen inches squaie, with a strip five inches wide nailed across the open front at the bottom. When a hen tbt: wants floor to sit set one of these boxes I on of your sitting room (tlio floor is supposed to be covered with dry earth), put in a shovelful of fresh earth, hollow it out a little in the center, enough to keep tho eggs from rolling away to the corners of tho box, but not enough in so that they will be all piled up the middle, cover the earth with a little fine hay, or chaff, or cut straw, sprinkle in a little sulphur, line tobacco, or insect powder, put in three or four nest eggs and your nest is ready for the hen. Don’t move the lien the very first night you find her on a nest after sundown; just let her sit there on some nest eggs fully for a made day or two, until she gets her mind her from the up. Then, after dark, take nest and place her on the nest you have prepared in the sitting room. Handle her.gently so as not to frighten the her. Place a board so as to cover front of the nest, and fasten it so that it won’t fall down if the lien happens holes in this to hit it. Have a few augur board so that the hen can have plenty of air. Leave the hen on the nest all the next day. Do not go near her to see “how she is getting on;” she will get on, or rather stay on, better if you let her alone. After dark the another next evening of place a dish of water, whole corn and oats where she can ’Oe them when she wakes up in the morning, take down the board from the front of the nest, but do not dis turb the hen. In the morning, after it is daylight, tho hen will see the corn and water, come off, cat and drink, walk about and fix up her feathers after the fashion of sitting liens, and probably go buck to her nest and settle down as con tentedly in as though she had chosen that nest the first place. Planting Potatoes. The potato is one of the important' crops of the farm, and one which under 1 ordinarily favorable circumstances can be grown with as little trouble as the average of crops. Within the past few 1 years,or since the advent of tho Colorado beetle, cultivation has been attended with more trouble because of the extra labor required to destroy the beetles or i their larva 1 . The last season was an uu favorable season because of a blight that largely the affected the crop, reducing it in aggregate amount very much. With proper almost care potatoes can be grown upon any soil that is reasonably dry, and that is possessed of fair fertility, nl though able. This a sandy vegetable loam is usually prefer will usually sue ceod fully as well and probably better upon a soil that has been devoted to pas turage best for some time. It seems to thrive when obtaining a share of its nourishment from an old sod, and another important conditions consideration is that with such tho tubers are usually cleaner and smoother than when grown upon old land or that has been under previous cultivation fora little time. Potatoes will seldom do well if planted upon the same soil for a succession of years; the tendency is to roughness and scabbiness. The soil, as before sug gested, should be fairly fertile, and any supposed for by deficiency application should be provided surface an upon the after depth ploughing, of six eight, which inches, should and be to a or then tlioroughly harrowing. incorporated with the soil by means of One important point to be secured, is a light, soil, as the potato will seldom thrive in one that is compact and hard. If tins condition cannot be secured by the usual tillage of the soil, it should bo provided best for by other means, and one of the is to use the some furrow coarse with strawy the seed. manure placed in After the surface is made mellow by sufficient harrowing, the field should be • furrowed to mark the rows, and these farrows should be made to a good depth, as we believe, all things eon sidcred, that it is better to plant to a considerable able faith in depth. home Wo have consider manure for potatoes, having always secured good and satis factory results from its use. Sometimes it has been strewn in the furrow and the seed the dropped lias upon it, and sometimes operation been reversed. Our practice sized lias for some rime been to cut fair potatoes to two or three eyes and drop a single piece for a bill, the pieces in being dropped about one foot apart the row; as a sort of stimulant, a small quantity of superphosphate each hill, may and be dropped by the side of if the soil is Dec from stones the cover i in S may be done by the use of the plough. ..... Ashes are recommenced very highly by some in the planting of potatoes, but we are has compelled to say that our experience but this have not encouraged been their use, peculiar may because of some ity of the soil. As soon as up the potato crop should be hoed and kept clean of weeds or grass; there is nothing that will affect the growth of the tubers more than a thick growth of weeds in the rows. Clean culture is always to be rec ommended, but with potatoes it seems to be an absolute necessity. —New York Observer. Farm and Garden Notes. Don’t fail to have a good garden. Moss in meadows means wet, poor soil underneath. If there is spare time put the gates and fences in order. A good way to distinguish mushrooms is to sprinkle salt on the spongy or under side. If it turns yellow, the specimen is poisonous; if black, it is wholesome. The cultivation of the potato crop cannot begin too early or be too thorough. The period of growth is short, but we ought to give them every possible chance while growing. A good force-pump with which the orchardist may apply insecticides early in the season amJ thus prevent loss from insects, is one of the requisites of the re muncrative fruit farm, jt jg the lively, snowy tree crickets that cut off leaves, stems and blossoms «f tlio grape, girdle the stems of rasp ^"ies an«l «u.se twig blight in apple, fl™ and other run trees A farmer’s wife teHs the Farm and Home „ that if butter makers will put tneir cream through a thin linen hag just both- he fore churning it, they will not be ered with white specks in the butter, A New York farmer states that he nse ff ° ,l! y coal g as litr to prevent the ravages of the potato beetle. Ho puts a gallon of tar in a tub, over which he pours boiling water, which is allowed to settle vines and with cool. This is sprinkled sprinkler. over A the an ordinary suffices gallon of tar, several costing seventy-five cents, for acres of potatoes. There is a greater demand for ever green corn than for any other, it is late, and, therefore, preferred for and, can ning. It is very large and sweet, therefore, in demand for soiling and en silage, Being late and large, it is diffi cult to cure the seed without fire heat, which should always be given, to have it safe from freezing when cold weather conics. An i inn I A I f aclnnents. “Funny, isn’t it,” said the keeper of the Baltimore Zoo to a Herald reporter, “how different kinds of animals and birds will become at tached to each other when caged up together or confined in adjoining compartments! Now, there’s that ring tailed monkey, for instance, he lias been making love to the booby owl. The latter sits blinking in the next cage, and the poll parrot and the tomcat in that cage over there are as inti mate ns two burglars planning to crack a safe, “The funniest thing in the whole lot, however, is the way that snake the in wire the and cage over here itself crawls around through the white twists monkey’s tail. time, Talk about a monkey and parrot the antics of that monkey and snake lay all over anything mischief in that line. They play the sometimes, too, The other day while performing one of their double-trapeze acts the snake must have bitten the monkey, for the latter got mad and swung himself ball around and with dashed the rapidity through of a roulette into the next cage. He kept whirling tho snake about, knocked down three doves in the pigeon loft, broke the glass out of the east window, bursted through dead the wire Woodbury. netting and started they on a run for Before got to 1,ie ecJ G e of the woods the monkey dart 0,1 «P a <rt ' 1 ’’ Tim monkey is up the tree yet,, but he is minus his tail. I he SImkc «Ti‘Tn't want to follow the animal 11 » the tree and twisted itself around the 1,; ‘ s0 of the tree « while t he monkey made !l desperate appendage, plunge and parted with his caudal ‘' T)l ° snake then crawled back to the ^ 00 aH| l entered its cage and hung the monkey’s tail up on tho imitation tree stump and went to sleep, ' 10 'H’wsoi tlie a Oil*, .t i Mr. F. I>. Mocatta, in bis recent inter osting lecture ou Judaism, estimated the total number of Jews throughout tho world as between 8,000,000 and 10,000, 000. In Ihe l nited Kingdom seven-tenths there are about 100,000, of whom are in London, tho great part of the remain der in Manchester, Liverpool, Leeds and Birmingham. Scotland reckons only 1500, Ireland only 1000. In the British Colonics there are something less than 20,000. In France there are about 70,000, of whom 40,005 arc in l aris, About 40,000 were transferred upon the annexation of the provinces to the Ger man Empire, among whose 50,000,000 of inhabitants 000,000 belong to this re markable race, .lews are found in largo numbers along the northern coasts of Africa, as well as in Abyssinia. and Jews In America there are 500,000, and almost are dwelling in Mexico in every state of South America. There are sup posed to be from 40,000 to 50,000 in Persia, 10,000 to 15,000 in the Khanates, and a like number in India. Switzerland, Belgium and Holland have also eonsid erable Jewish population. Tho influx ol Jews into Palestine from other parts of the Turkish dominions and also from Poland, Russia and Central the Europe, early which has been going on from part of the present century, is a note worthy fact. The Turkish Government is described as showing an entire tolera tion, but it is not now favorable to an immigration into Palestine, a circutn i stance attributed to fear of the inroad of I European ideas. The state of the Jews j authority, in the Holy Land happy is, according There to is this but i not a one. little outlet for their energies. A large number give themselves entirely up to | Hebrew studies, while tlie bulk of them J eke out a miserable livelihood by small industries, apparently aided but in reality intensified in pauperism by the perni | [ cioua system of “Halukah” various for distribu tion of alms sent from countries, j which are doled small out among .—London the Jewish News, j population iu sums The Destructive Teredo. Those who have watched the vessels hauled out on tho marine railway and noticed the pieces of planking taken from them, will have seen that some of them are completely honeycombed. This is caused by the ravages of the teredo, or ship or pile worm, one of the greatest works pests in Southern waters. The on this subject say: “The shell is thick, short and globu lar, hind, widely valved, open in front and be tremity lodged at the larger or inner partly ex entirely of lined a cylindrical "with tube, matter, or calcareous and often open at both ends. The valves are reduced to mere appendages at the foot; in the centre of their circular open ing this organ is protruded, the whole forming a very effectual boring appara tus, which is indicated by their peculiar shape, vular strength, arrangement of the val ducted ridges, and great size of elonga- the ad muscle. The animal is ted and worm like, the length being due chiefly each to the prolongation backward siphons of of which respiratory provided tube, the calcareous arc with two triangular, flattened plates, tho palettes of which are always turned to the exter nal aperture. They attack wood im mersed in water, boring in the direction of the grain, and only turning aside when a hard knot or a companion is struck, the presence of the latter being detected by the sense of hearing. The dust of the rasped wood is introduced by the cavity into the mouth by the foot and swallowed, being usually found fill ing the long intestine.” In the construction of the wharves in this harbor, palmetto piling brought from the small islands on the Florida coast have been found to withstand tho ravages of the teredo better than any other material. The cost of replacing the piling destroyed by this marine nui sance in these waters will amount to thousands of dollars annually, and ves sels not coppered or having their bot toms sheathed with metal have to be hauled out every three months for repairs. Some English years ago a brig arrived here from an port,and lay at an chor in the stream for several weeks during the and summer. The craft was not coppered, hauled on returning to her home port was that out, when it was dis covered the bottom had been com plately honeycombed by the teredo, and it had to be replaced by new planking. —Galveston News. Bats in China. A plague of rats is reported in China, which recalls Hamelin. the German legend of the rals of Certain postal routes have bad to be changed in Outer Mongo lia on account of the honey-combing of the whole country by myriads of rats, who have burrowed and eaten up the pasturage so extensively that the supply of food for camels and horses is greatly diminished, and the burrows are couriers. danger ous to all mounted travelers and The prize offered by the Australian Gov ernment for a riddance of the rabbits which infest that country may afford a suggestion to the authorities in China to offer inducements which M. Pasteur or some unknown Whittington may find advantageous enough to undertake the task of ridding the country of these vermin. Why They Moved.—A little Harlem boy whoso impecunious parents are al ways moving from one house to another, was asked by the Sunday-School teacher: “Why did the Israelites move out of Egypt?” their “Because they couldn’t pay rent, I suppose,” was the reply. JonN Half, of Westbrook, named his first child First Half; his next, Second Half; his third, Other Half; and Ids fourth, Best Half. He says that his blessings come in halves. W »« America Ever Discovered? At the time when Columbus started in search of the New World, nearly every man, woman and child in Europe insisted that there was no New World to discover. A\ lien ho came hack, crowned with success, a large pro theory: portion of these good people adhered to their them would and if doubtless they were alive to-day many of insist that America had never been discovered at all. A man will give tip any theory. thing in For this world more readily than a pet uals who still maintain example, look at the individ incurable. l)r. Pierce’s that Golden consumption Medical is has Dis covery cured thousands upon thousands of cases and will cure thousands more, but these people can’t give up their point. Never theless the “Discovery” will cure any ease of consumption, if taken in time. Nothing i» mure liable to cause loss of appe tite than ea: ing. CAN’T SLEEP! Sleeplessness and fearful dreams are the earliest and surest healthy signs of brain exhaustion. In sleep brain force is being stored up to meet tho next day’s de mands. But nowadays the ner vous system has been so over tasked that it is unable to control the mind, and at night the worries, troubles, and work are Hence as present the brain as during the day. time has not to recu perate its energies. The proper medical remedies are sedatives, nerve regulators tonics, laxatives, general func- and CocaAs4? of W the tions. and celery are the seda fives and nerve toni es de w / m a n d e d, and in Paine’s Celery fl’hj'their W* Com pound full ben fi°i f e a l effect Italsocontains, is '*~y yjtf^obtained. in scientific//?/ Tyfejproportions the the best ma V A /Vj ‘qMeriameili- reaicdiesof ca andkidneyl^j for con V j .| \ stipation t y and liver disorders. This is a brief des cription of the modi" 1 ~’i'ine which sands has brought sweet rest to thou who tossed in sleepless ness from night to morning, or whose morbid dreams caused them to awake more tired than ever. All nervous, sleepless, debilitated, perfect or aged people will find vigor and health in the great nerve tonic, Paine’s Celery Compound. Price, $1.00. Sold by druggists. Circulars free. WELLS, RICHARDSON (SCO. Proprietors BURLINGTON, VT. A POST-OFFICE ROBBERY. How the XhleTes Managed to Get Into the Safe; A post-office inspector says:—I went nn into Minnesota to investigate a rob bery. The postmaster was a well-to-do German merchant, whose greatest ambi tion is to be postmaster. He has a e*n, •Hid,' a round-faced little boy, who was all smiles and smartness. When the postmaster received his commission he called Nick to one side confidentially: •Nick, I am der bostmaster; you are der assistant bostmaster. Der government don’d feel trust us with brobertv, und I righd aboud it. I must go down to St. Haul und puy a safe.’ So the old man went and bought a new safe that cost $425. They got it in place, put all the stamps and'other government property into it, and two weeks later burglars en tered the building and the safe was opened and robbed. When I got on the ground the postmaster first wanted to read his political speeches in the last campaign and tell me how much he thought of the administration, but we got to business finally. He showed me how the burglars got into the building— showed quite an easy trick—and then the safe. ‘Und dese doors was open just as dey are now!’ he said. I looked over the safe; it was brand new—not a mark of violence on it anywhere, nor locks dis turbed. I told the postmaster Nick must have forgotten to lock it the Nick night of the burglary. This brought to his feet in a paroxysm. All at once something caught my eye on the wall. It was: ‘Turn to the right three times, stop at 37; to the left twice, stopping at 91; to the right once to 84—open.’ “ ‘What is that?’ I asked. “ ‘Oh! dot is der gombination. T You see, when I get this new safe in they sent a card up from St. Paul with that on, but I forget him, and Nick he lose him, so I just write dot up on der wall where we can see him.’ “ ‘And you can’t imagine how the thieves got into your safe ?’ “ ‘I haf buzzled my brain over it for two months!’ “ ‘Don’t you think the thieves might have found the combination ou the wall?’ “A great light seemed to break in upon the honest German ‘bostmaster.’ He opened his eyes wide, looked again tho at the safe and the combination on wall, and then, with a big sigh, so.’” remark ed: ‘Well, now, maybe dot was Lassoing Tramps. —Officer Orguello f of tho Los Angeles police, carries a las so, and he finds it of great assistance in catching tramps who may desire to evade him and the jail which awaits the cap tured tramp in that city. Tlio Ke-nlt of Merit. When anything stands a test of fifty years among a discriminating peop’e, it is pretty good evidence that there is merit somewhere. Few, if any, medicines have met with such continued success and popu arity as has marked the progress of Buandketh’s Pills, which, after a trial of over fifty years, are con certed to be the safest and most effectual blood purifier, tonic and alternative ever introduced to the public. Tha; this is the result of merit, and that Bba ndheth’s Pills perform all that is claimed tor them, is conclusively proved’ by the fact that those who regard them with the greatest favor are those who have used them the longest. T>;:andreth’s Pills are sold in every drug and medicine store, either plain or sugar coaled. Keely, the motor man, is trying to invent toboggan that will run up hill. Chronic nasal catarrh positively cured by Dr. Sage’s Remedy. There is no such word as “fail” among fruit, preservers. Their motto is: “I can.” Don’t neglect your teeth, they are too able. Use Long’s Pearl Tootle Soap. Heck & Greg Hardware Co., ATIjAIMTA, ga. m GANG mention Prices Write PS for and this i,;i| S» fife i .-K . *r<.\ :. ■o 14 o fi> o » < FURNACES MILLS paper. 0) (■' r WS ^mampm »•«*■* .wf I ii fis i- Jf Hi •III : tgYJHI I! .Vi" y h-'W SFiisl - m kBr Doyou want a good, anil simple reliable Inspirator? I B *s IBPJI i y ik fulfil § 'luasnua ^Ir| mn* = E.< SnP fFE* i s vwAaifi -uor> |? £ | m I JONES HE p /«"»si. E !8Kr Iron levers, Steel Hearings, Brass yim S?1 Tare 3e*m and Beam Box for SQO. # -|S?|SSiiS r N Outchar’s-:- Lighhiing FLY KILLER ‘A / Is «sed; no death: ianger easily flies don't prepared live long amt »-y- a • ; ^4p c enough to get Use it early. freely: rid the away. Don’t house of them and b*» at peace. take anything •‘jn-t S«R fTd-k'oTt'c-H ER,«. srr 1 - LARGE protrementa, store, post-office.orchards and vineyards, up and swamp land, *>»*• ash, hickory and other timbers, good neighborhood, fine condition for cotton, tenants, churches; sitmiles from 30, James K. lv. station. Building, Address Robt. I, Rodgers, Room At. ant a, Ga. PlSO’5 CURE FOB CONSUMPTION O I. It is worth SiUO per lb. Pettit’s Eye S»lre is M worth it.OhO, bat is sold st Sic. s box br d»»l«r«. Centennial Exposition. Cincinnati will be filled with visitors until cession, the the last May of October. Musical In Festival, quick suc- the National Encampment Knights of Pyth- Odd ias, the Patriarchs Militant of the Fellows, from all parts of the country city. and Canada, play their parts in that Beginning 4th of July, the Centennial Exposition holds a hundred days’ jubi lee in honor of the 100th anniversary of the settlement of the Northwest Territory. Not only Cincinnati and Ohio are inter ested in this celebration, but ten other sovereign and independent states clasp hands and go to the aid of their sister commonwealth, in showing to the world, by means of a monster Exposition, what marvelous have changes within and improvements borders taken place their within the space of one hundred years of their history. Why is the tramp like badly printed calico ? He won’t wash. iousness, For constipation, sick headache, “liver and complaint,” all diseases or aris- bil ing from a disordered condition of the liver and stomach, take Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pur gative Pellets—a gentle laxative or active cathartic, according to size of dose. Anarchy is in tears. Two breweries caught fire last week. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp son’s Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c. per bottle. is? it 1*** STARRY FIHMAMEH*!* 1 OH HISS,” * * * ^.Sang for Addison. few But hadn’t^ least, you, a years at rather look at the firmament from the underside ? ^ YOU CAN DO IT it. K by observing the laws of health and resorting to that cheat-the-grave medicine ★ Warner’s Safe Cure ir You are out of sorts; a splen did feeling and appetite one day, while the next day life is a burden. If you drift on in -j^-this way you are liable Why? to-^p become Insane. Beca use poisoned blood on the nerve centers wlierein the mental faculties are ■^•located, paralyzes becomes them^ and the victim non responsible. There thousands are of peo . pie to-day In insane asy- k Xlums and graves pulR' thereby Kidney-Poison ed Blood. • tics, Insanity, is increasing according faster to statis- than ^any eye-sight other disease. failing ? Is Your yourWt An memory ali-gone becoming feeling impaired ? exertion you? on If slight upon so,and is^T XYOC know whether this so or not, do not neglect your case until reason totters and you day are an imbecile, but to » while you have rea- ■ ''son, use your good sense and - ^" judgment by purchasing WARNER'S SAFE CURIS and WARNER’S medicines^# XSAFE PIULS; warranted to do as represen ted,and which willcure you. ir ir ir MARVELOUS MEMORY DISCOVERY. Wholly unlike artificial systems. Cure hook of mind learned wnnderinjr. reading. Any ill one 1500 Classes Philadelphia, of 1087 at Baltimore, 1113 Washington, 1005 at Detroit, 121(5 at at at Boston, large classes of Columbia Law students at Yale, igan University, Wellesley, Oberlin, Chautauqua, University Ac., Ac. of Penn., Endorsed Mich Richard Proctor, the Scientist, Hons. W. W. Astor, by Judah P. Benjamin, Principal Judge Y. Gibson, Dr. Brown, E. H. Cook, N. State Normal College, Ac. from Taught by PROF. correspondence. LOISETTE, Prospectus 237 Fifth Ave.. post N. FREE Y. Hesse's With Improved Circular Saw Mill Rectilinear Universal Log Beam ^ Simultaneous i , Set Work and Double Fc centric Feed. Accurate! Friction > His J Simple! Durable! Cheap! Manu- Wt factured by SALEM IRON .-5 - ; SAG WORKS, Ell, N.C. n Seines, Tents. Breech loading double Shotgun at $9.00; ■ingle Rifles $3.50 barrel Breech-loaders at $4 to $12; Breech-loading to $15; Double barrel Muzzle loaders at $5.50 to $20. Repeating Rifles, 16-shooter, $1 i to $30: Revolvers, (St to $20 ; Flobert Rifles, $2.50 to $H. Guns sent O. O. D. to examine. Revolvers by mail to any P. O. Address JOU.Y tit)VS GREAT WKSTKR.f GUN WORKS, PltUburg, Penn*. ■ ASTHR9A 1erman Aathnm i'ure n«ver CURED fail* to give , {rrw'iiaie relief the m. in worst cases.insureH comfort able sleep ; effects care* wheroa l others fail J trial convinces the most skeptical. Price 50c. and Iforstamp. SlwOD»o£I)rnggist8or I>k. it. SCHIFFMAN, by mail. Sample l’REE St. Paul, Minn m PC & □ to 58 a day. Samples worth Eft? $1.50, FREE Mich. Cincinnati JULY4E10 27£: Im. OCT. iJS 4'fft • i tt 14M 1 r •-- - jj l 4 I r «fer X? tm c wwmouiio win GRAND JUBILEE celebrating the Settlement of the Northwestern Territo ry. UN SURPASSED DISPLAY. EXCURSION RATES FROM ALL POINTS B. B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm.) Observe the following editorial from the lanta Constitution, the foremost At j South: paper of «, “Tho Constitution has observed the growth of an Atlanta institution now famous well-nigh the world over. It is the Blood Balm Company who make B. B. B. We have watched the cowse of this medicine in hundreds of cases that appeared to be hopeless, and it has worked amazing IVe take pleasure in giving cures the who make this our endorsement to men up company. They truthful, accurate and are conservative business men or physicians. They have the confidence of the people among whom they live, and their medi cine speaks for itself. A whole library does not outweigh the heartfelt testimony of one man who, in despair from a disease, no doctors have been able to cure, and other remedies aggra vated, finds that B. B. B. has restored his health, vigor and manhood. And just such tes timony the Blood Balm Company have by the bushel." No other remedy in the world can produce the number of genuine testimonials of remarkable and seeming miraculous cures as cau B. B. B made in Atlanta, Ga. Bead a few here sub' mitted: KIDNEY WEAKNESS. For fifteen years my liver and kidneys have been badly affected—not a day in that time without the headache. Since using B. B. B.— Botanic Blood Balm—I have been entirely re lieved ; no pain, no trouble at all, and 1 feel almost like another person. I am one among the greatest advocates of B. B. B. and yon are at liberty to use my name. Mas. C. H. Gay, Rocky Mount, N. C. RHEUMATISM. Newton, N. C., June25,1887.-Gentlemen: I am pleasured in saying I have been a sufferer of rheumatism for ten years, and I have ex hausted almost every known remedy without relief. I was told to try B. B. B., which I did after long procrastination, and with the ex perience of three bottles I now feel a healthy man, and take it as a part of my duty to make known your wonderful blood purifier to suffer ing humanity. Respt’ly, W. I. Morehead. BRIGHT’S DISEASE. I have been a sufferer from kidney and blad der troubles for several years. I have lately had what is termed Bright’s disease, and have had considerable swelling of my legs and shortness, of breath. The urea has poisoned my blood also. I used (B. B. B.) Botanic Blood Balm. Am delighted with its effects. John H. Martin, Rock Creek, Ala. TONIC. I have for some time past used B. B. B. as a purifier of the blood and to build up the sys tem generally, and consider it without excep tion the finest remedy of the kind in the mar ket. Yours with best wishes. Arthur G. Lewis, Editor Southern Society. WEBER FIANO-FORTES, ENDORSED BY THE LEADING ARTISTS, SEMI NARIANS, AND THE PRESS. AS THE BEST PIANOS MADE. Pries* *s reasonable end terms as easy as consistent with thorough workmanship. CATALOGUES MAILED FREE. Correspondence Solicited. WAREROOMS, Fifth Arenue, cor. 16thSt.,N.T. C<>BlSi Confessions limited. Price 35c# Send at once. Address A. CHASE, DEDHAM, MASS. •ssvm ‘itvimria ‘EfS'WiO “V BgaappV *oouo paas '*>SC ® 3 1 J J •poipxttt paefoosj ud/o SUOISSdJUOQ 1 ■—®l£NO 1811 no KOI0S SI SOMjnil ♦nvixMa Plantation Self-Contained Engines With w iRETURN FLUE BOILERS, J [COTTON FOR GINS DRIVING and MILLS. | Illustrated Pamphlet Free. Address CO. yjAMES LEFFEL & | 'or 110 SPRINGFIELD. Liberty St., New OHIO, York BLOOD POISONING* SEtfsS charge. Our Urinary Organs positively cured Malaria or and no Yewovv reven medicine is a preventive of receipt ot Jo Full size sample bottle sent free on cents to prepay postage. Address Till 1 - I»A *V. U. MEDICINE CO., linx 301, UnioiivHH’. GINSENG AND M SKINS Bought for cash at highest market prices. Send Tort. for circular. OTTO WAGNER, SO Prince St, New Great English Gout and Sf yilSa Rheumatic Remedy. Oval BOX) 34; round, 11 Pills.______ SOLD Live at home and make more money working for us than I at nnvthinpr else in the world. Either *ex. Costly outfit JUICE. Terms FREE. Address, TRUE St Co., Augusta, M aine. A. N. U...... .........Twenty-eight, ’88.