Jones County headlight. (Gray's Station, Ga.) 1887-1889, August 11, 1888, Image 4
AGRICULTURAL TOPjCS OF IVTEIIKST KEb TO FARM AM) GAKHE-V. Dislocation of the Hip Joint. In cases of dislocation of the hip joint the first thing to be done is to restore the limb to its proper position, which can ral usually be hold done very quickly if sev < men take of the limb and pull it out so that the joint can be replaced the by a sudden movement and pressure on thigh bones. Then give the animal rest, the weight using a sling if necessary to relieve on the injured leg. 'thru proceed to foment the hip with thick rugs or any thick cloth,ami after tho in iiammatiqn oi sonic liniment has subsided containing apply ammonia a blister or chloroform. The animal will need a long period of Test to effect a permanent cure. he hip would bo rubbed daily even 7 CCaSW to u|,|,iy U1 ' meets * t9 ' f, prevent „ the wasting * away of the flesh over the injured joint. The rubbing causes an increase in the circulation of the blood in affected parts, —New York run. Save » lie Flu ms, s “Veteran Fruitgrower” says in the New York Tribune: “The eurculio, so destructive of tho smooth-stone fruit (and injurious to early apples and pears) is u small insect a fourth of an inch long, hcnipjjfed. resembling insize and appearance a ripe As soon as the flowers drop from, the plum and apricot, it begins its work, by making a small crescent shaped puncture in the young frnit, now no larger than a pea. into this puncture it thrusts its egg, which soon hatches, and the young larva enters the fruit, eats and •grows, smaller and destroys its value. The tall rim plums and those first attacked to ground. The remedy (which is better than all the many others ever proposed fifty and tested, and which is based ou years of successful experience) consists of killing tho insects before they have done much harm, by jarring down on white sheets, and pinching them be tween thumb and finger. To make the jarring long effectual, insert an iron plug as laterally ns one’s finger into a hole bored in the trunk at the centre of the head, or if tho tree be large, into each main branch, and strike with a heavy hammer on the plug. The heavy jar loosens the hold of every eurculio, ami it falls on the sheet below, is easily seen on the white surface and is quickly dis patched. The best form of the sheet is h piece about two yards wide and long, stretched on a light frame, to be carried mi the operator’s left arm with the ham mer in his right hand. Ho holds the sheet first under one side, then under the other, with a sharp blow of the ham mer each time, followed with the finish ing pinch of thumb and finger. As soon as the blossoms drop and the plums are as largo as small jieas, the crescent marks will be seen, and the work must be begun, going o'er every tree early in the morning, without inter times mission, for about three weeks. Some when the insects are most abun dant, time ten or fifteen may be found at a ued on jarring n single day tree, but by the contin after day, they will gradually hards diminish to one or two or none. < He containing forty or fifty plum trees, the crops of which were so nearlv ruined by this inset that not a peck o"f good fruit remained, have been so com after pletely protected by this process that the destruction of several hundred loaded insects, the trees were afterward seen and bending under their heavy crops of purple and golden fruit, the cost of defending which did not amount to more than six cents a years for each treo. —The common mistakes made in de stroying limbs with the eurculio are: 1. Striking the a mallet which has been padded with cotton to prevent bruising the bark. The blow is thus softened, but few of the insects fall; on the iron plug, one sharp blow brings down every one. 2. Spreading sheets on the wet ground, with boys to carry them from tree to tree. With light rods to stretch one large sheet, and a central rod for the operator to carry on his left arm, he needs no help and keeps the work dry and clean. J. Beginning the too Into in the season, after most of the plums have been punctured, iuter mitting it, and stopping too soon. Farm ami Garden Notes. In Summer succulent food is the best, because the cow Reeds more water during warm weather. But if fed entirely on green food in Winter, the cow may be obliged food. to take too much water in her A. W. Chccver claims that grass can be grown much more economically in rotation with other crop's than if the attempt is made to grow it continuously on the same land for a long term of years. Endive is a kind of lettuce grown for fall use, and when nicely bleached, makes a pleasant salad. Spinach is a crop that can be had all summer, by fre quent sowing, but is more in season in spring and fall. The director of the Massachusetts Ex barnyard periment Station favors spreading out manure on the surface of tho soil as soon as possible. It does not gain in value by being kept, and it is un healthy for stock to have it stored uuder them. A vast deal of trouble can be saved if the battle with the insects is waged at the outset. The little silvery network that spreads itself at the junction of two bare limbs looks harmless enough now, but when the skeleton hands of leaves stripped themselves of in all pleading their greenness extend to be vid of tho hungry worms draw that cling to them in an attempt is serious to the last drop of life, it a state of things. Then it is too late to arouse to tho conception of the work to be done. That there is such a disease of the peach tree as yellows is unfortunately too well attested. Still, much that passes for yellows is due to other causes —poverty of soil and Winter killing of the previous year’s growth. In any kind of tree the withering or dying out of deail branches will in time affect its vitality. hardier The apple is a great deal and stronger tree than the peach, but even on this a dead limb is, if not speedily others, removed, soon followed by until the tree dies. In many cases other causes of peach trees dying area-scribed to yellows; not infrequently the cause will be found near the root iu ua attack from the borer. CURIOUS FACTS. brought A silver $275. pound piece qf Charles Thirty loaves of bread are sold for $1 at Fort Valley, Ga. J. F. Irwin, of Oswego, N. Y., paid $10,000 for a Bible. The voice of Henry Hammond of Alas could peih, be Long heard Island, mile: who died recently, a Dade _ , ,. I la., alhgatoi turns out an jaws fourteen to close feet long, around and pork with barrel, a spread oi a A South Carolina newspaper says j j there is an old colored man in who has been married nine times j has had 117children, | Ed Snyder, of Dayton, Ohio, has I dog that eats onions. The curious ! animal will dig up an onion bed to get at the bulbous vegetable, A Tusco | a county (Mic h.) man has, during the past eleven years, been tapped time* for dropsy, and 2500 pounds * of water tak cu from his body. lhc wife of , ,, V otello , ,, ,, Sanchez, , a Mexi- ,, . can, gave bath at Pomona, Cal., to three healthy boys. J he babies have been called Los Angeles, Sun Bernardino and San Diego. An eltn tree growing in the grounds of the Pennsylvania Hospital, in Ph'ria under delphia, which is a William scion of the held famous tree Penn the first tieaty with the Indians. A Georgia which, man has a three-legged chicken it is said, when it grows tired of walking on two legs, corkscrews itself over and hops along on the third in a highly entertaining and original man ner. A Puget Sound (Oregon) sawmill has sent a stick of timber 151 feet long and 20 inches square, to an exhibition in San Francisco. It is believed to be the largest piece ever turned out from a saw mill. Two young hunting boys of Lafayette, Wis., went out a few mornings ago and shot five wolves before noon. Then they took the scalps to the County ( Jerk and received $100 in bounty certificates for their morning’s work. Giles Shoot, of Calhoun County, Ga., has a steer twenty-three years old, by whose help he has managed to raise twenty crops and a big family, The animal, once jet black, is now very gray, but spry and hearty as a two-year old. Mr. Arbuthnot, of Beaver’s Falls, Penu., fed his twenty-year-old horse on brewers’ grains for awhile; and from being the developed steadiest animal in town, the horse has an idiosyncrasy oi running away that makes folks think him crazy. For the past ten years the owner of a flouring his mill fireproof at Dubuque, Iowa, had a sign on here—please safe, reading: “Nc money is call at the house.” It was intended for burglars, and the other night one called at the house and secured $1870. Jesse Ruth, of Newtown, Penn., had the little toe of each foot amputated the had other day as a remedy for corns. lie suffered such pain that he threatened to cut the toes off with a chisel if the family would not consent to have sur geons perform the operation. Abraham Nancy llanks Lincoln, the mother ol Lincoln, is buried ou the out skirts of Lincoln City, Ind. A plain slab of marble about four feet high, al most covered with grass and dogweed, marks her grave. On the stone is the inscription: “Erected by a lriend of hei martyred son, 1879.” The oldest merchant vessel, with one schooner exception, Good now in actual service is the Intent. She was built by Clapp and & Loring originally in P.raintree, Mass., with in 1813, was a sloop, square 48 feet; stern her and breadth, no figurehead; 1(> feet; her her depth, length 4J feet, and her measure, 29 tons. The home port of the Good Intent, according to the list of 1880, was Camden, Me. A Hero of Chemistry. Dr. Gotterman, of the University oi Gottingen, has enrolled himselt among tho heroes of chemistry. Chloride of nitrogen (N. Cl. 3), discovered in 1812 by Dulong, is one of the most terrible explosives known to science. It has al ways been supposed that its elements yond were in doubt, tho proportion but now dared proved be no one to con firm it. Dulong himself, whose discov ery was accidental, suffered the loss of an eye and three fingers, and since that nothing more positive Gottermann, lias been in the learned about it. Dr. pros ccutiou of his examination, was com pelled to hi9 wear especially with thick prepared glasses gloves, protect eyes and the greater part of his body with two thick window panes, from behind which ho watched the substauce. No accident happened,and ho was able to prove,after a protracted analysis, N. drying, etc., that the formula, Cl. 3, is correct—one atom of nitrogen to three of chlorine, lie further observed that N. Cl. 3 does not explode in tho dark or twilight, but a ray of Sunshine will cause almost in stant explosion. This knowledge will enable chemists to handle the substance with comparative impunity. Dr. Gotter mann is heralded as one of the coming scientific stars. of Bunsen, and Hoffman beiug nearly eighty years will age, both well on to seventy, soon retire, and one of their places .—Globe will probably be given to Dr. Gottermann Democrat, Neglect Lost Him a Fortune. About ten years ago Mr. H. B. Mikel, iff Milton County, invented a rotary mo tion to churn with, and used it at home. It was a groat improvement churning, on the old fashioned way oi and saved time and labor. i?ome of his friends advised him to patent it, but he neglect ed to do so, thinking he would patent it at some future time. Nearly twe years ago family Messrs. Davis & Cobb were selling in this rights for the same churn county, auff called on Mr. Mikel to sell him one. On examining it Mr. Mikel found it to be exactly like his churn, and showed his churn to them. Borne other man had patented it and made a fortune out of it. Iff Mr. Mikel had taken out a patent when he invented the churn it would have paid him hand Homely.— Atlanta Constitution. Wood is now a popular fuel in San Francisco and other parts of California— due to the great advance in the price ol coal. A Simulated Suicide. I!” Pont $£;.% de 1 Alma m Paris the other o/z after noon. Just as the crowd was at its thickest a poor mail suddenly and jumpe thre the parapet oi the bridge he luin-elf over into the >_eine. As was struggling in the water another man jumped into the river alter hun, amt succeeded in bringing him safe to the shore. The spectators of this thrilling lncident clustered round the poor fellow and his gallant preserver and asked him why he had taken so rash a step. W ant, he said, had driven him to suicide, Moved to tears by the afflicting nara- of live, the man to whom this victim circumstances over which lie had no control, owed his life, put his hand into his pocket, and, producing all the cash the which he had about Inspired him, by presented this bright it to suflcrcr. example the crowd, which had mustered in force, pressed silver and copper coins on the poverty stricken individual who had sought a watery grave. Soon a very fair arid, sum of money protestations was in his possession, of grati with many tude and promises that he would en deavored in future to take the “ups and downs” of life more philosophically, he slowly quitted the spot in company with the man who had so gallantly res cued him. Now, it so happened that a police inspector had found his way among the throng, and having less confidence in human than the worthy holiday makers who had been pouring francs and half-francs into the pockets of the would-be suicide, bethought the couple. himself The of pair kcelling walked an eye on on until they reached a public bouse outside the beaten track, and into this place of refreshments the inspector followed them. Oddly enough, their arrival ap peared patience, to for be quite expected with some lm an assemblage of their friends greeted them with en thusiasm. Drinks were ordered by the poor man who had just been fished out of the Seine, and as they were being discussed he gave the company a graphic account of his adventure: hut the story was a very dilTerent one from that which the horror stricken spectators of the Instead thrilling of incident eliciting w’ould have related. exclamations of sympathy and congratulations, it was received with peals of laughter, in which, strange to say, the rescued man and his gallant preserver joined heartily. The whole thing had been goten up bo tween them. One man threw himself into the river to attract the attention of the crowd; the other followed, and tho tale of suicide was trumped up. The accomplice gave his money to the friend whom he had pulled out, in order that the tribute bystanders might The “little be induced to con freely. game,” how ever, was marching entirely spoiled bv the police inspector the There two rogues off to the nearest station. are many such impostors in Paris. Old Ships. The Resolute scoured the Arctic seas in search of Sir John Franklin. She was frozen fast in the middle of a wide waste of ice and abandoned by her crew. The ice setting outward from the frigid zone, bore her southward, and after a re markable drift she was picked up by an American whaler. The United States Gov ernment refitted and returned the derelict to Great Britain. She lay uncared for at her moorings in the Medway for several years, and was ultimately taken in dock and pulled to pieces. A suite of furni ture was fashioned from her oaken timbers and presented to the President of the Republic. Small pieces of her were smuggled out of the is dockyard, held and many a wooden article dear at Chatham as a relic of the brave old dis covery-ship. The duel between the Shannon and the Chesapeake (June the 1, 1813) forms the an interesting page the in history of struggle Britain between from United States and The Great 1812 to 1815. Americans had crowded the Chesapeake with inexperienced landsmen, and shore had made ready, it is said, a feast on for tho crew on their return flushed with victory. The unexpected happened as as usual; the American frigate became the prize of the ship of the mother country. The Shannon also was broken up at Chatham, and parts of her hull were eold at a premium. Sir Francis Drake’s tiny ship, the Golden Hind, at a still more remote period chair came made to a similar of end her at timbers Deptford. is A out treasured by the university authorities at Oxford. The Betsy Cains brought over William of Orange to this country in 1388, and was cast away in 1827—139 years later. This historical ship, that helped to change a dynasty, was over 150 years old when she ceased her combat with the winds and waves. The Brothers, a wooden brig, built at Maryport in 178(5, is even now ploughing the waters of the North Sea. Kensington We noticed a good model of her in South Museum. She is one of those box-like craft that sailors say are built by the mile and cut off as they are wanted. The Robert, a wooden barkentine built at Victory, Barnstaple is just ten years after H. M. S. in active service. The True love of London, an American-built bark of 1734, would appear to be the oldest trader in this country, or indeed in the whole world. The Goodwill, built at Sunderland in 1785, the Eliza, built at Whitehaven iu 1792, and the Cognac Packet, built at Bursledon iu the same year, remaining complete the list of British ships The to us from last century. Norwegians possess three vessels that have been employed actively for 100 years— Chambers' Journal. An Old-Time Dinner. Among the manuscripts preserved at Alnwick, England, and printed in a his tory of the Percy family, which has just been compiled, is the following menu, marked “Windsor, fith of February, 17l>7": Pullets Pottage roasted of rice. Speck. with Mutton collops. Leg of Pork Hare roasted roaste<L and Potatoes. A guinea fowl roasted. Spinuage A Pippin and sweetbreads. Tart Oysters in Scallops. Macaronia Sweet. Beef, eold and collat’d. Boar's Head . Wheat Four sheep, settled a hog and ten bushels ot an Iowa breach of pro mise suit where $25,009 damages were The Clay Pipe. ^ ° work( ? d at Glen Cove milie8) f L . L The ay c stH ^ a ton at the -with freight charges, &c., it amounts ^ a bout §5 per ton before it is landed at the factory. As soon as it arrives the c ] B y jg spread out lieat and seasoned by being ex p OBet i to the of the sun, which rr ( . Iie rally occupies several days. It is then ^ mixed with water and passed throu a w hich crushes it and removes the Btoues an(t grift which cling to the Cfude o] ft j a tlien kneaded with the j lan( ] 8 j u the same manner in which brea d is kneaded, and carefully freed froro a ji f ore .i gn substances, <.After tlio clay has been brought to tho proper consistency it is carried to a T> . or kumn called a ‘roller,’ who sits before a bene i J) on tho top of which lies a a sm00 th, square board. In making a pi „ e til0 < ro u e r’ takes in each hand a Bmall i ump t‘ D f the fresh desired clay length and deftly and ro u 8 j t ou to the thickness leaving a knob-like lump at the end G f p i ec0i which latter is form ed j nto the bowl of the pipe, the .< At this stage of its manufacture half-made pipe is laid upon a measure, which marks the latter regulation been length made of the stem. If tho has too long it is then clipped off. When a dozen pipes have been thus formed they are passed to another workman, who sits a t a complicated machine, in which tho pipes are further manipulated. The man a t the machine first oils the clay, after which ho places the rudely-sliaped oiled pipes in a mould and inserts an and polished wire through the steins, mak ing sbo aperture through which the smoke is drawn in using. The mould is then placed in the macliine and the bu perfluous clay is forced out. “The pipes have now taken on their final shape and are laid in tho sun to dry, after which they are polished and put in a large earthen receptacle called a ‘sagger,’ which is covered and arrang ed with a dozen other saggersin the kiln, The door of the kiln is then securely fastened, and the fire, which is fed with charcoal and coke, is started and kept at a white heat for fifteen or twenty hours, The tiro is then allowed to die out slowly and when quite extinguished allowed the doors are opened, the saggers to cool and their contents examined. The pipes, which before were of a dull blue color and very limp and soft have become per fectly white and hard. The finished pipes that have been examined and found perfect aro carefully packed for in barrels and boxes, and are then ready shipment. _____ Valuable Find. Hitherto all the lithographic stones used in this country have come from Bavaria, where the mines have long been worked and are fast becoming exhausted. Now perfect lithographic stone, in large sheets, has been discovered within a hundred miles of Austin, Tex. This will add another important industry, and aid in the prosperity and development of South. From the Ex-President of the New York Stale Senate. State of New Yoiik, Senate Chamber, : Ai.AnSY. March 11,18S6. I hare used Aeecock’s Porous Plasters in my family for tho past five years, and can truthfully say thoy are a valuable remedy and effect great cures. X would not he without them. I have in several instances given some to friends suffering will: weik and lame backs, and they have invariably afforded certain and speedy relief. They cannot be too highly com mended. Edmund L. Pitts. of Bowdoin LL. College, M. \V. Fuller Me., conferred and the 1). on Gen. A Pill iu Time. Saves Nine ! Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellets are preventive as well r s curative. A few of theso “Little Giants,” taken at tiie i ight time, with little expense and no inconvenience, will ac complish fice of time what will many fail dollars do after and Disease much sacri to oneo holds you with his iron grasp. Constipation relieved, the liver regulated, the Blood puri fied, will fortify against fevers and all con tagious diseases. Persons intending traveling, changing diet, Pierce’s water and Pleasant climate, will find in valuable, Dr. convenient Purgative Pel lets. In vials to carry. A walnut grove planted now would make good twenty year endowment. If all so-called remedies have failed, Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy cures. Absinthe drinking is said to bo the alarming “fad” in New York. Use T.ong's Pearl Tooth Druggists. Soap for your teeth. 35 cents at _ Beck & Gregg Hardware Co„ ATLANTA, OA. —dealers in— Wagon Seales. — *r~ TV t>: Write fox want “ [i so, write Ill") “'54 K: K 1 N1. Manufacturers and Dunbar» m Cotton. crul “’golrn 3“" un‘ul Hou fimmflu-u. “’rougllt and Iron “runs PT" loads. Finiuga 4 5.3mm; Mu, ATLANTA, GA, K a 3 ‘— v 1‘» 3!}? £53 fl: a .m H ; ‘ g» 41p ‘ 3??!»- .555 '7 57:4" m. , 45." a +3? ' wash sumv ,5 ~ 3 WESLEYAN FEMALE COLLEGE 3vl.A.COUST, Gr-A- Begins 51st Annual Session October 3d. 1S8S. olden and the leading college for girls looking in south. All modern improvements health, safetv, comfort and advancement of pils in Literature, Science and Art. Pure mild climate, generous table, thorough teaching. Apply earlv for KEY. catalogue W. C. BASS, to D. D., President PH Si^fc Medicine EOXS superior ’ which offers the Stud »• n t of S l 'l>R t( OPIKiDfiam. flno N. Howard St THOMAS m Ur* at homo ami niftkomor** money working for ns than I at anything else in the' world Fithor Vastly, wit fit FKKK. Terms fkkk. Address Tuck & lo., Augusta, M atue. PIS OS CURE FOR CONSUMPTION Are Von Sick and DUconraned ? I£ so you are the case we want the address of* We charge you nothing for a trial bottle. "V\ e nine cases out of ten of chronic constipa tion, diseases of the urinary organs, liver and kidney troubles, malaria and all brain and nerve troubles. Agents wanted in every town The postage on one bottle is 25 els. Vs e leave it with you to send it or not. We shall cure vou if you will give it a trial. It contains HU poison' Address the Hart Medicine Co., llmon ville, Ct. __________ And now it is said, Jay Gould is laid up with a cancer. A Woman’s Confession. ‘‘Do you know. Mary, I once actually con templated suicide? ’ "you horrify me, Mrs. It. Tell me about it.” “i was suffering from chronic we,kness. I believed myself 1 looked the most unhappy woman in the world. ten years older than I really was, and i felt twenty. Liteaeemeil to have nothing in it worth liiose living lor.” “1 have Well?” experienced “Well, all X symptoms the eleventh myself. hour from the was saved at com mission of a deed which i shudder to think of. A friend advised me to take Dr. Pierce’s Fa vorite Prescription. Ididso. in an incredibly The short time X felt like a newbing. ’Pre scription’cured in *, and J owe Dr. Pierce a debt of gratitude which r can never repay.” The farmer who belittles his calling belit tles himself, if such a thing is possible. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp- bott son’s Eye* water. Druggists sell at 25c. per le. mm 'mmh U Ym-} m "mb ' 'MMM % MRS. DART’S TRIPLETS. President Cleveland’s Prize for the three best babies at the Aurora County Fair, in and 1SS7, was given to these triplets, Mollie, Ida Ray, children of Mrs. A. K. Dart, little Hamburgh, became N. Y. She writes: “ Last August the ones very sick, and as I could get no other food that would agree with them, I commenced the use of Lactated Food. It helped them immediately, and and they were socn as well as ever, 1 con sider it very largely due to the Food that they are now so well.” Cabinet photo, of these triplets sent free to the mother of any baby bom this year Lactated Food Is the best Food for bottle-fed babies. Tt keeps them well, and is better than medicine when they are sick. THE MOST PALATABLE, NUTRITIOUS, and DIGESTIBLE FOOD. EASILY PREPARED. At Druggists, 25c., 50c., SI.OO. The Best and Most Economical Food. 150 Meals for an Infant for SI.OO. ifo* A valuable pamphlet on “The Nutrition of Infants and Invalids,” free on application. <• WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., BURLINGTON, VT, MEN AND BOYS! Do you want to learn all about a Horse ? How to l’ick Out a Good One' How to Know Imper fections aiul no ^riMSEfEi fewgg. Guard Fraud? against flowtoMLMSHl mA Detect Oisease^piM^HJ if %,ir and effect a cure fmgSsaDlmm If when wizW/Bb... same is jrsa Different Parts f h,!/Ww of the Animal? f How to Shoe a Horse Properly? All this, d other Valuable Information relating to the Equine Snecies ran be obtained by c p e 0 r, , „ pu i,f’ JVn IA 25 GTS. IN STAMPS. HORSE BOOK CO., l .M Leonard St., N. Y. JONES PAYSthe ft Tan IV FREIGHT Seales, Iron Levers, anon BeariBgB, Bra** Steel Tare Beam and Beam Box fur ^ sso. Jtrerr siae .Seale. For tree price list i_a mention this i”xt>er and address if * DINGI1A MMS Of £IJIGHAim% 1ITON. N. V SI 60 SAW FARMERS MILL. m KXtllKKS, Wood t’lav.ers. Circular Urge’s fmprovoil.l Haw Milm ate With Universal Log Beam Recti- Prw linear. Simulta- mm neous Set Work and Double Jic centric Friction s -- : Feed!. Manufac- -~^i=SK*Sir n tnred SA LE by M the IRON WORKS, SALKU, N. C. WE SELL ALL AMERICAN BICYCLES. AmU;imrantpe LOWEST PRICES. ^ nnyten. O. Largest retail stock in price America. $40.00. v: in OTTO, factory “ price “ $f»0.00, our “ “ 35.00 ,<) in. “ 55.00, :«.oo. 18 in. 50 00, “ 45.00, “ 30.00. M in. “ “ “ 40.00. “ “ 27.00. > )r«ler quick. Also250 second-hand Wheels. Repair Nickeling’. Bicycles «t Onus taken in trade. BLOOD PQISQMIHG, & 7 &S Urinary Organs positively cured or no < harge. Our medicine is a preventive of Malaria and Yellow Fever. Full size sample bottle tent free on receipt of 25 SFSMM 6i latch i hem alive with B Styner’s Sticky Fly PAPER Sold by all drug gists grocers, or ailed, postage paid, on receipt of •> *11 fs. T. K. HAWLEY. Manufac *57 Roekmaii fif ect, .New York. Blair sPills Box, ■ Great Rheumatic English Remedy, Gout and <»val »4s I’liiuiii. I I I'illH, W S S Ure-.v.ler Safet the Hein ssp.it Holder ^7 ree y C’o.. Holly, Mleh. Cincinnati OCTJ'' JULY ! I tt .....t * «* ■ rfX Ct t tEUDiJLHPOSniOPPi GRAND JUBILEE celebrating ^ the Settlement of the Northwestern _uns urpa ssed dis play> EX CURS SON RATES FROM ALtTPO^' DR. SCHENC fCS mandrakepTlls ff 'e mucous branes of the stomach p raen ,. assimila^ me digestion and congS' bIood They relieve the liver of poisonff,' * a chance to extract bile hi/ glVeit blood, to make them into good Th'\? “ ,he secrete just what is needed r4 ,a tear their way and irritate like mn 4 no1 lives, but they treat all the surges an? 1 ' gans, so that the entire sy stem They are based on scientifie principle They are entirely rational and natural ’ They always do what is claimed forth™ • They work on the system in th ew »y claimed. They work together for the greatest good They are not like new and untried medico, printed by all Druggists. directions Every for use. package if hasfSy ” 1 J understand yourself send for you Sehetrf! Book Diseases Dr. s new on of the hung, /: and Stomach. Sent free. Address 1 >, 7 H. Schenck & Son. Philadelphia ’ J’ WEBEB PlilfO-FOETSS i ENDORSED BY T1IE LEADING ARTISTS »fy i NAHIANS, AND THE PRESS, AS THE BEST Pimm MADE, Prices as rensonable and terms as easy as consistent with thorough workmanship. CATALOGUES MAILED FREE . Correspondence Solicited. WARDROOMS, Fifth Avenue, cor. 16tliSt.,S.Y, EVEtiY mmn m Sees some of' her Pouitrf / \ die each year without knowing how what the matte? dh was or to effect a remedy if she does recce nize the Disease, This If < m not right, of !].) as at crtiMu an ex pense stamps) she can imunira a XMM’ftw imu giving the e xp crieuce but of a practical working Poultry for dollars Hater and (not an luring amateur, tet period a of man 25 It tencliesyoi Cl •exits) x a and years. Jlisenwest hmvt* howto Pelrct Cure also for Fattenim: Feed for Fowls Eggs and Ihet-diiit' I’tif' which to Save for know poses; a ml this everything, indeed* yon mimM on 134 lieonard Street, X«It.City* MARVELOUS DISCOVERY. Wholly unlike artificial systems. t’ni e of mind learned wandering. Any book in one reaiung. Classes of 1087 at Baltimore, 1005 at 1500 at Philadelphia, 1113 at Washington, u‘< Boston, large c f of Wrrip; University of Penn., itrail University, YTritauqua, he &q . '• v-v " KiriiAHD PnoCTOix, t Sen-ill i*'i, tlUDAHP. BENJAMIN, Judge (ill - • •, i ''. U. Cook, ‘MsmSgfe. Principal N. Y. State & ht CS <9 sar* CVS •j, u : FLY KILL! - Isqu ick death; easily don’t prepared yej I * used ; no danger; flies 'f " freely'’ enou rid Do.'f't Hie ffouso Mk'.- of JUiytii tin-oWj i l ' at pence. as good.” There is nothin'.' like the tteniune ->H er’s. FRED’K D l Till KU, »t. AbWi Plantation Em With Self-Contained RETURN FLUE EBILl i FOB DBIVINS COTTON GINS aadMIl ! IJIustrat^l r.niptlct LEFFEliC f rPC * ** iJAMES 0«Hj SPUIXOFIEU). St.,>eivT 110 Liberty |^8hMCun| Revolt I I » < M r^itend cat for Pries List. Seines, Tents, Dreecli loading double SS? wanliV PUBLISHERS O Iff i OR THOSE WJI O I ^ Ti:Nl> TO, WOULD FIND IT PROFITABLE CORRESPOND WITH THE j ATLANTA NEWSPAPER H i0 ATLANTA. ’ % s-n,2u. (nr l.i^L■lf^'■«»l VMS»re | l“ l ’^ l ‘ M ^ _-J _ O 1, » is worth $500 sold perlb. at -------H VI wurth $1.000 . hut is A. N. U.....................