Jones County headlight. (Gray's Station, Ga.) 1887-1889, August 18, 1888, Image 4

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AGRICULTURAL. TOPICS OP ixtkrrst relative TO FARM AM) GARDEN'. Summer Treatment of Azaleas. Azaleas have become quite plentiful of lale years, and they are quite charming for the greenhouse or window. Most of them exposed for sale by the florists in the late winter months are imported from Germany. They are exceedingly nice if grown as little plants, and are a bouquet in themselve-; when in flower. The summer treatment of these plants, after they have done flowering, consists in encouraging a free growth, pinching out any ot the shoots likely to grow out of size with the rest. A warm, moist greenhouse, with the plants near the glass, is just the thing for them. 1 hose who have oniy the windows had better kfeep them there until the end of June, The best place for Azaleas out of doors is a spot where they can be shaded from the mid-day Sun, and the pols may be sunk in the ground, taking care that worms do not get up among the fine roots. A sandy loam with one-fourth leaf mould is a good potting soil. The plants are raised from cuttings, which strike readily from the half-ripened young bench shoots, in the ordinary cutting .—Prairie Farmer. Riijjjjing as a Business. A man who makes their ways a study duly •—a paid insect detective, devoted to his might, says a writer in the New 7'ribnne K do great service in a neighborhood . , , by and peach borers, keeping down apple worms, rosebugs and curculios, currant such v.rsts. Knowing when slugs, and other and how to meet from them, he could, with a little aid the families he makes engagements with, do very much to preserve the beauty and the produce of the plants surrounding there our dwellings. In Europe catchers are professional mole-catchers, rat and vermin destroyers, and they siand well in the community as doing special service, and having qualifications and knowledge not generally possessed. Professional insect-controllers would be even not only more for worthy their of support and regard, the service in preventing destruction of valuable crops and plants, but as a means of acquainting the youth of the country with some of the leading facts of practical entomology, and as being watchmen, prompt to detect the first appearance of any new insect enemy, and to suppress in time what, with delay, may prove very difficult or impossible to get rid of. I Making Flush of Grass. Every dairyman knows that green grass is the cheapest as well as the best foot! that can lie used for producing milk. Most persons prefer butter and cheese that arc made while cows feed entirely They on sweet and tender moie' grasses. , think that they have a ngree able flavor. Grass is so much cheaper than any other food given to cows, that outside dairying cannot be profitably carried on of a good grazing district Eng land, Holland and Denmark are the best dairy countries in the world, chiefly for the reason that the climate and soil an* ■well at laptod to the growth of grass. In parts of the world where the rain fall is limited to a few months in the year, the grass when ceases the to grow supply during the dry sea son, of milk immedi ately begins to falls off. The Northern States have great advantages over the Southern ones in the production of milk, for the simple reason that they produce more and better grasses. Cow-swill give milk il they are led on dried forage plants it will sell and grain, but it is not likely that for enough to pay for the food consumed. Eve ry shcep-raiscr knows that green grass is the checpest food for producing wool. The best grazing districts are the most favored ones for the production of wool. There is much profit on that part ol the fleece that grows while sheep are in tho pasture, but very little if any in the part that grows while sheep aro kept in pens and are fed on food that has boon harvested. Hay and grain will make wool, but the chances are. that it will not sell for enough to pay for the food that the sheep have consumed. Crass is tho cheapest as well ns the best lood for producing flesh on cattle, sheep, and horses. Most farmers are aware of this fact, but in practice they appear animals to in forget it. They keep these during the poor or closely-fed pastures veryilittle. summer, where they gain but On the approach of cold weather they remove them to stables or yards and give them all they will eat, The fall and early part of the winter are the times when most farmers expect to put their stock in good condition for the market. They spend the entire season of warm weather in raising crops to feed the animals after the cold weather COm but meaces. They neglect, them in summer, Seek to make amends for it by giv ing them most excellent- attention dur ing the winter. Cows, steers, and young cattle that fared poorly in the pasture now faro sumptuously in the stable. They receive hay from tho mow and eoru from the crib. Young horses have their mangers full of cured timothy cut and their boxes are supplied with thrashed oats. The best time to make flesh is while the grass is growing. It is then sweet and tender, andanimals will derive more benefit from it than they will after it has attained a larger growth and has been cut, cured and put in stock. Green grass is us valuable for making flesh and tat as for making milk and wool. The farmers who know the best pastures make beef, mutton and horseflesh at the smallest cost. They aim to add to the weight of their animals while the grass grows and the weather is comfortable. They do not keep their pastures over stocked. If a protracted drought oc curs, they cut grass in meadows, oats or corn, and feed them to their stock. They aim to have their animals in prime con dition at the end of tho grazing season. If the season is favorable, they expect to have some steers that are grass-fattened. These will be the animals on which they will make the most money. Next to them in profit will be those that will re quire hay. but a small amount of corn and Both lets can be disposed of be fore the snow falls. When this is done there is a great saving in stable-room, labor and food.-- Chicago Times. Farm and Garden Notes. In using eggs for hatching the largest and strongest chicks will come from eggs layed by the hens or fully matured pullets. Kggs that are small or double yelked are not suitable for hatching. On most farms the manure is too un equally distributed to give the best profit. Some parts are manured heavily annually. and The garden is one such spot, as it requires more labor than any other equal area, it is fairly entitled to a greater portion of manure. offensive Washing substances the trunks of trees with to keep out borers appears to A. W. < heever ‘‘like going it will a be long way round to get there,”as much less work to dig out what few there are in an orchard well cared for than to wash all the trees. The pig that brings the farmer the most money is not the one that yields him the greatest profit. Fall pigs win tered over and fattened the next fall are almost invariably expensive animals. Where corn is fed to cattle whole, a few pigs may be kept to follow them with out much outlay, but only a few. Referring to a plea for artificial color agriculturists) ing of butter (made by one of the official New England, Farmer a correspondent of the if it wouldn’t be pertinently inquires the equally admissible to use same tint means bluish to give the desired creamy to milk, in deference to the preference of city consumers. / German Dairy Schools. An European letter, noticing agri culture in general in Europe, has the following in relation to the dairy school of Paeselez-Meinersen, near Luneburg, opened in 18H4, and under the direction of H. Hasselmann, says the pupils follow four sections of work—the dairy, school, household mmagament, and the kitchen confined and flower gardens. reading, The schooling is metic, the to latter with writing special and arith reference to and keeping simple garden, accounts. The flower kitchen in the light work of which they take part, is limited to cottage and farming wants. restricted The house keening is in great part to that of the kitchen. For the dairy the girls have to assist in all the processes of butter and cheese-making, to keep a register of the yield of each cow, anil to test samples of the milk. The director gives every theoretical explanation re quired. The school manipulates gallons of milk daily—the pupils sixty-six girls. Some milk is furnished being seven from by contract farmers. The l.aval hand separator is in use. From time to time the Swartz and Holstein butter systems are tried. Since the adoption of the hand separator more butter, and of a superior quality has beeu obtained as with older methods. The experience of M. Hasselmann respecting the utilization of the skim milk is important. He considers it is very suitable for making into cheese, but is, above all, excellent for feeding calves, lie shows by his books that when skim milk is made into cheese, or employed for hog fattening, it is not so remunerative as when given to calves. Ilia plan is to give calves uncreamed milk daily, fresh and pure; on their being able to consume their five quarts he sup plies them with as much unskimmed milk as they can take. In the course of eight or ten weeks they are fattened, not very fat, but fleshy. M. Hasselmann does not believe in the theory that to obtain whiteness of flesh feeding on whole milk is essential, lie maintains that the aptitude for whiteness is inherited by the calf from its mother, is dependent on race, and the kind of food given to the cow. M. Hasselmann has tried every variety of substitute for milk in the rearing and fattening of cattle, and con cludes that substitutes are of little utility, but often quite the contrary, as they can prove a danger. — Farm, Field and Stock man. Built Over Ruins. As tho traveler walks on he perceives that his footsteps are not upon the orig inal ground of Jerusalem, but upon a mass of super-imposed matter which has been strewn over the whole site. His tory enumerates seventeen captures of the holy city, eleven of which Were at tended by sieges more or less destruc tive. After many of these events tho houses then standing were razed to tho earth. These were in time succeeded by new houses, which in their turn were overthrown at the next siege, and so on, each capture adding to the accumula tion of rubbish. Thus the traveler learns that a compact layer of solid coat ing, from thirty to fifty leet in thick ness, has been by degrees spread over the entire space. Even the valleys and ravines between the several hills on which the city was built have been so far filled up as to have partly lost their special character, as already mentioned. The Tyropheon brook is perpliaps the most have particular heard instance. The traveler will of this brook, or read of it in Josephus, as a landmark in the in terior of this city', but he will not find it. Nevertheless it was so deep that at its exit from the city ot Moriah the bridge-span feet above its was bed. more than one hundred Its course has been traced by tho discovery of the arch and by deep excavations here and there which have exposed the lied now over laid with mins .—Palestine Illustrated. Embraced by a Blanket Fish. A few days since Joel Smith, who was engaged foundations in sinking idling in the sand for for bath-houses beknv tho excursion district in Atlantic City, N. J., Cvineluded, as he was wet to the waist, that he would take a bath in the ocean. The ocean was very caltu, and he had scarcely entered when some thing suddenly blanket 'wrapped about him like a wet He was close to the shore and got there very lively, lie rushed to a saloon and was horrified to find that the thing was alive. It held on by suc tion and required three men to get it off. A scientist, who is stopping at a hotel near by, pronounced it an l .lactyo cacgatheus, or what is vulgarly known as the blanket fish. It frequents the waters of the Polar Sea and is only occasionally found away the'Pacific from it. It is sometimes found in Ocean as low as the thirty-fifth parallel. It wraps around its victim and by impeding the motions of the limbs causes it to drown. It was dark brown in color, with black specks, and weighed about fifteen or twenty thick. pounds. It was not over an inch It is thought to have been the first one ever caught in this section. —Philadelphia Time*. A Silly Little Girl. A woman weighing something like 200 pounds came into the Grand Cen tral Station the other day clinging to the bony tipped arm the of a beam little man ninety who prol> liis obly clothing. of in winter He led the way to the ladies’ waiting room, and deposited the lady in two chairs, started out. “You won’t be gone long, will you, dearie t” she gasped out. “I feel so timid.” “No, darling; I’ll be right back, don’t worry about me.” “Oh, J shall, dearie; I can’t help it, and I dread being left alone.” “Well, I’ll be back in ten minutes.” “Oh, do; I feel so nervous.” He was gone fifteen minutes and when lie reached her side again, she tried to tumble into his arms, and said sweetly “Oh, and Harry childishly. You ! were gone an age. I was so frightened ! Ah, Harry, you will find tl.at you have married a very, very silly little girl,”— Tid-Bits, Historical Spot. Cronstadt, where the young emperor of Germany is visiting the Czar, is the principal station of the Baltic fleet of the Russian navy, and was created by Peter the Great. It is situated on a bay of the Gulf of Finland, and guards the approach to St. Petersburg. It is strongly forti fied and is a city of about 50,000 inhabi tants. ions is the Among its architectural attract castle of Peterhof, the scene of the festivities in honor of Emperor William, which was begun by Peter the Great about 1720 and named in his honor. There are many relics of that famous monarchs in the castle, and some of the trees in the garden were planted by Peter himself. Uot a Back-Set. Milk shakes have received a set-back in Pittsburg, Pa. That city has a Sun day law which does not permit the sale of intoxicating liquors on Sunday, anti prohibits tiie sale of milk, though per mitting its delivery on that day. The proprietor of the Fulton market was re cently arrested and lined $35 and costs for vending milk shakes, although the great Francis temperance agitator and orator, Murphy, and the chief of po lice appeared in favor of the milk shake. The average length of a Wall street career is said to be ten years. In that time the means or vital energies of most men are consumed in the furnace of spec ulation. The number of those who hold out twenty years is few, and fewer still is the number who can bear the excite ment for a longer period. Corel of Mnlnrin. 23 Florida St., Elizabeth, N. ,T., I March 17,1884. f I have been using Allcock’s Porous Plas ters for tlia last five years. Homo two years ago, after having been sick for upwards of six mouths with malaria, I found myself with an enl rged spleen, dyspeptic, and constantly trouble 1 with a headache, and my kidneys did notact very well either. Having spent most of my money for medicino and medical advice, I thought to save expense I would use All cock’s Porous Piasters, two on the small < t my back, one on the spleen or ague cake, and one on tiie pit of the stomach, just under the br asthone. X continued using the Plasters about thirty- days, changing them every week. At I he end of that time I was perfectly well, and have remained so ever since. George Dixon. Beer was prescribed for a horse in Chicago, uml it died of delirium tremens. Yes, he loves you now, ’tis true, Lass with eyes of violet blue, Lips as sweet as bride! honey-dew, Bonny little Will he love you as to-day. When your bloom has tied away, When Will v his ur golden love abide? locks are gray, Yes, if it is the true kind it will survive all the inevitable wastes and changes of life. But, it is every woman’s desire and uuty to retain, as long as she can, the attractions that made her charming and beloved in youth. No one can keep weighed her youthful down and bloom suffering or equable from female tem per if Pierce’s Favorite weakness and disorders. Dr. Prescription is a remedy for these troubles. Sold by druggists. Dr. Evans the famous dentist of Pari-, will Iiresunta statue of LaFayette to thecity. The remedy for baldness recently discovered by H. A. Feeliter.of New Haven,Conn., seems to be almost infallible. It is performing some wonderful with cures, much and physicians are watching ils effects interest, A circular giv ing I he history writing of its discovery can bo ob tained free, by to the discoverer. Human bones are shipped from Africa to Australia to be used as fertilizers. An Offensive Breath Is most distressing, not only to the person af flicted if ho have any pride, but to those with whom he comes in contact. It is a delicate matter to sp ak of, but it has parted not only friends but lovers. Had breath and catarrh are inseparable. tiie l*r. Sage’s thousands Catarrh Remedy testify. cures worst cases,as cun Oatmeal anti water is a refreshing and strengthening drink for men working in heat. ‘Do you want a good, reliable Inspirator? and simple S 3 V* l ?tU?|| 2 m 106QILEH V- vKAsie H £ 1 ROANOKE Cotton and Hay F-ItESB. 1 he best ami cneapesi made. Hundreds in actual use. Bales eotton/tff/fr than any 1:.\ .•jJhk sin can pick. Address C- U KOANOKK IKON AND *218$. J WOOD i on and WORKS liny Frets for circulars. our Cot Chattanooga, Tenn. Box.60 s*«* te Shot Ouns lS3B nfa9 ^ . §!«* X^Xand RSFLES Piatols. pAJ » -nil KzSm&ss* iF r 1 1 U PJ yi IliustnileJ )5( l Catalogue. r 1 £3 Sox X 1061 V, Ideal Kew Haven. MTgCo.Xf^p Conn. P 3 SIOO to S 300 A MONTH ran for t>« made working horses us. Agents anti preferred »tve their who whole can time furnish the their business. own Span' moments may profitably emnloved also. A few vacancies irk towns and elites B.F. JOHN SON A CO.. UI13 Main su. Bit Um nd. Vs. GCU I I.Stp at anythinpr at home else ant! in make the more world money I'.ilher v. orkinyr for i'« •mtfit i han rKK*. TermakKkK. Ad«l rwaa, Tri t fc Auguai*. M*m«. TCVflC I LAHv I LH«U *iin- , >.e«0.#Oe»cn'*besta«i ricnl- sale. timvl and twsnc land for Aadrvss.GOlU.UY A. POKTEU.Ualla5.Tex. /nvrntlonsnf the 19th Century. The steamboat, the real or, the sewing ma chine, running by night and by day, Cars heated by steam. Houses lighted by gas and And bright electricity’s ray. The tete,graph’s click speeds like lightning re Thci) leased, telephone to excel it; the comes but not And, to pdt on the finish, the last the least, Purgative Pellet. Is famed little Pleasant , Lasi hut not least is Dr. Pierce's Purgative P.-llet, bacausa it relieves human suffs ring, adds to ihe sum of human comfort, and enables the relieved sufferer to enjoy all the blessings and luxuries of the age we live in. The Knights of England, Labor organization is spread ing rapidly in Conventional “ Mnu»u ” Resolutions. Whereas, The M non Route (L. N. A. A <'. By large Cojilessires that it forms to make the it known double to the world at connecting link of Pullman tourist travel between the winter cities of Florida a d the summer re sorts of the Northwest; and Whereas, Its "rapid transit” system is un surpa'-sed, its elegant Pullman Buffet Sleeper and Chair car service between Chicago and Louisville, Indianapolis and Cincinnati un equalled; and Whereas, its rates are as low as the lowest; then be it Resolved, That in the event of starting on a Cormick, trip it is good Gen’l policy Pass. to eon-ult with it. O. Mc St., Chicago, Agent Monon Route, 185 Dearborn for full particulars, (in any event send for a Tourist Guide, enclose 4c. postage.) If you are going to buya Cotton Gin this year don’t fail to write to the Brown Cotton Gin Co., New London, ( cum., for their prices and testi monials of the thousands who have used them. Warm Waves Are rolling in. You can’t escape them; but you can escape the sleepless nights, loss of appetite, and languid feeling that result from draining the nervous force by muscular or mental exertion in summer’s torrid days. The use of Paine’s Celery Compound, that great nerve tonic, will at once strengthen the nervous system, and fortify it against the attacks of summer debility. This pre paration is a medicine, not drink. * It is a a sci- ^ xh entific /C r - combi cY u/ nation of giving the best! last A : t* [(I C~ingben- tonics, efit to bo Y \/ r) dy and brain. It , JeA. cures all nervous 1 diseases, and has 1 brought new life and j / health to thousands whose weakened nerves were the cause of their many ills. It is especially valuable at this sea son, when feeble persons are so lia ble to sunstroke, a disease which is nearly always fatal. Paine’s Celery Compound, by restoring perfect health, almost entirely re moves the liability to this dread disease. If you feel the effects of summer’s heat, you can’t afford to delay another day before gaining the vitality only obtained by the use of this great medicine. Sold by Druggists. $1.00. Six for $5.00, Send for eight-page paper, with many testimonials. WELLS.RICHARDSON & GO.. BURLINGTON.VT. -DODSON’S s PRIHTERS’ SUPPLY DEPOT ATLANTA, GA. PRINTING MATERIAL Everything Used in a. Printing Ofiice at Manufacturers’ Prices. JOB PRESSES, CYLINDER PRESSES, JOB TYPE, NEWSPAPER TYPE, PAPER CUTTERS, LEAD CUTTERS, CASES, STANDS, CABINETS, LEADS, SLUGS. PRINTERS’ ROLLERS A SPEC IALTY, ♦ Cincinnati OCT. july 272= m to U o. : v>- LiirM'xu s': m y* ' 4 te V CEUTEIINIPL EXRISITIGMGEilO fRLLET GRAND JUBILEE celebrating the Settlement of tbs Northwestern Territory. UNSURPASSED DISPLAY. EXCURSION RATES FROM ALL POINTS. Bed & Gregg Hardware Bo,, u 7 A , GA. —Dealers in—< Wagon Scales. ■ : * SE2 PjspfCl i-tr Write fox-' iPrices,, *! THE LIVER. Works with the Stomach and the Stomach with the Liver. You must have good bile to have perfect digestion, and free liver ac tion to have pure blood. Therefore beware of a congested Liver, which is nothing more than a thickened and clogged Liver. The great reducer of congestion is Schenck's Mandrake Pills. BILIOUSNESS. An early and ugly form of liver trouble. It is blood poison. The Liver is not taking the bile ingredients from the blood. Treat it with Schcnck’s Mandrake Pills and make it do so. BREAKING DOWN If you have neglected the laws of health too long and feel that your lungs are involved in any way, send for Dr. Schenck's new book on the Lungs, Liver and Stomach. It is sent free, and will be of infinite service to you, Dr, Sclicnci's i PULSSOPHG SYRUP SEAWEED TOEHC, PILLS are sold by all Druggists. Full printed di rections with each package. Address all communications to Dr. J. H. Schenck & Son, Philadelphia, Pa. Jggpf - “OSGOOD” a jlggA Sent tl. S. Staadari trial. Freight Scales. «8jgi ____________ ^WiAHT0iiK ?^?7/ on paid. FullyWarranted. 3 ton $ 35 . Other size;, proportion ately low. Agents well paid. Illustrated Catalogue free. Mention this Paper. OSGOOD & THOMPSON, Binghamton, N. Y. ^Revolvers, “***’-' Rifles, x to 6 } Addreca^^op g*- 'ssJEtc. < ^Se-.ni __ for /•rice Litt. (jnaWorks J PittPb>i--bJ?^«^ Seines,Tents, Breech-loaders Brceoli-loadlnpr double Shotgun Breech-loading at $9.00; lint?!© Hides $1.50 barrel to $15; Double-barrel at $1 Muzzle to $12; loaders at $5.60 bo $30; Repeating Flobert Rifles, Rifles, 10-shooter, $2.50 $•:>. $14 Guns to $30: Revolvers, O. O. D. Rl to ; by mail to P. sent to examine. Revolvers to any O. Address JOHN ITO.VS GREAT WE3TERX Gl\\ WORKS, l'ittaburg, Penna. BLOOD FOISOHiHG, Urinary Organs positively cured or no charge, Our medicine is a preventive of Malaria and Yellow Fever. Full size sample bottle sent tree on receipt of da cents to prepay postage. Address THE HART Ml.DIt INE CO., Box BOl, Uliionvitle, CL irists FLIES! mailed, postage paid, on receipt or grocers, or of cents. T. K. DAWLEY, Kew iHaniitac- ork. tiii’vr, 57 IJeekinan \ HERBEMD FIFTH WHEEL. 8 Improvement. UEKtBftANjJ CO., Fremont* PlSOS tURE FOR.CONS U M PTI ON >¥< 'A WniilA*47 1 iiii IBfejfgfs FURNITURE, RULES, STICKS, GALLEYS, NEWS INKS, BOOK INKS, JOB INKS, COLORED INKS, COPYING INKS, VARNISHES. PRINTENG MATERIAL Everything Used in a. Printing Office at ' Manufacturers' Prices. r e Hi "V A V nT' j SL ""1 mmm Itell m g - JgMMP W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE • gentlemen FOR durable tack.-i or nails those to wear costing the stocking? S', or $6, and h’lrtYvf hwiL no makes them comfortable or etl as ana well fit tin* hand warranted- sewed shoe. butH,m Buy the “ host. W U None gi-n mL“* * Dou 8& only made K*i»sfftMawt&»jasss shoes costing from $0 to $l). W. I.. DOUGLAS SJ.50 SHOE b Mei celled for heavy wear. - W. L. DOUGLAS *'4 SHOE is worn hr all Boys, and is the best school shoe ia the world. All the above goods Ore made in Congress Bnttm, and Lace, audit not soli hv your dealer W. L. DOUGLAS, Brncktnn, Mass. WEBER PIANO-FORTES, ENDORSED BY THE LEADING ARTISTS, SEMI NARIANS, AND THE PRESS, AS THE BEST PIANOS MADE. Prices as reasonable and terms as easy as consiutent with thorough workmanship. CATALOGUES MAILED FREE. Correspondence Solicited. WAREROOMS, Fifth Avenue, cor. 16th St,,R.Y, 08 M /lewis o vV^jf U i s if “■ IS I ! WHITE * 'll \ js ■kiSA'P* 0 o % TRADE MARK. JOHN T. LEWIS & BROS., WARRANTED PURE White Lead, Red Lead, Litharge, Orange Mineral, Painters’ Colors and Linseed Oil. CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED. HJkitWELOlfS MEMORY DISCOVERY. Wholly Cure unlike mind wnuderiiitf. artificial systems of Any bonk learned ia one reading* Glasses of 1087 at Baltimore, 1005 at Detroit, 1500 at Philadelphia, 1113 at Washington, 1‘ilh at Boston, large classes of Columbia Law students Mich- at Yale, igan University, Wellesley, Oberlin, University &o., &c. of Penn., Endorsed by Richard Proctor, Chautauqua, the Scientist, lions. W.W.Astou, Judah P. Benjamin, Judge Gibson, Dr. Brows, t. U. Cook, Principal N. Y. Stain Normal College, FRM ®c Taught by correspondence. Prospectus post N. Y. from PRO LG LOISETTE. 237 b ill h Av e.. 4®! - REPSEu Works easier, is simpler, ,In*t Out. strowjer, on’t t ighter, than any other. \ d BUY TILL YOU 8EK IT. BALLARD GALLERY, fiend HUNTING AND TARGET RIFLES. for 1 Mnstratt-d CatriloL-ue. MARLIN FIRE ARMS CO.,box soli, NEW HAVEH, CT. BICYCLES, WE SELL ALL AMERICAN 1 c mm A nd guarantee LOWEST PRICES. 0. A. W. GUM I* «& CO., Dayton, America U:irer*t retail stock in 52 in OTTO, factory price $60.00, Hoot)! our price 48 iu.’ 41 44 44 44 “ 33.00 4(1 in. 44 44 44 45.00, 44 " 44 Order in. quick. 44 A Iso 44 250 second-hand 44 40.00. Wheels. “ “ Repair 2WJ iug& Nickeling. Bicycles t!c Guns taken in trad# X ill ” WELL H DRILL A1I cuttings of the drill in clay, sand, gravel, rock#^ tool*? Noted for success* \vhero others Protits fail. Drill large. Catalogue drops 70 Free. lo DO times 1.0031IS it minute. A NYMAN* TIFFIN, OHIO. MEDIUAL DUPARTMEXT LOUISIANA, TULASE UNIVERSITY OF Louisiana-1 [Formerly, 1847, —1884, the University o? Its advantages for practical instruction, and espfcia . iathe diseases of the South-west,a*e unequalleo,aso\ iromtlie gn» law secures it superabundant materials Charity Hospital with its 7d0 beds, and 20.UW annually. Students have no hospital-ft-es to p«y»n spt ecial instruction is daily given ** i the b< d-* ,| «** * 111 t He Mick, as iu no other institution. For catalog or information, address Prof. S. E- CHAIL,I?. M. Orleiuis.Jb": Dean, GS-P. O. Drawer 261, New WESLEYAN FEMALE G 0 U.EGE IMI^COIEsT, G-A. begins 51st Annual Session October 3d. girls 1888; n l 9* oldest and the leading college ior J south. All modern improvements lookup, l health, safety, comfort aud advancement oi P“ pils in Literature, Science and Art. Pure wu-b mild climate, generous table, thorough teaemu. Apply early for REV. catalogue W. C. BASS. to D. D-. President. . _ Monroe Female College, FORSYTH, CA. education This Institution, ot “one ladies of the to best be for found the n* bi^» South,” young September will resume exercises apply 1S8S* For Catalocrue and particulars President. R. T. ASBUR V. Or I. R. BRANHAM. Secr^MT*__ Send for a Catalogue cf the ph Ysir i a ns'an r rgeons. which offers tl*VV of MinUcine superior adV Im: ttovtxAJW__ THUXIAS OPIE (DeanLWn S. Blair’sPills. Great Eng'ishGoul and Rheumatic Remedy. Oval Bus. 4 ii nd. 5 Pills. *5iIu....... ........Thirty-one,'S3