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AGRICULTURAL.
TOPICS OF INTEREST RELATIVE
XO FARM A.Vl> GARDEN.
Hogs on Corn.
If hogs are in clover pasture and you
have shoats that are relied upon for
.cLi.Tdio'Lnxrs™'!! b .? «“
X y “ u - «*'» b r tLe
Unless there is natural shade in the
pasture, artificial shade should be pro
vided. A few hundred feet of lumber
will save much pork. As clover contains
an acid that needs neutralizing, hogs
alkali while of feeding upon it should be given an
some kind.
Feed plenty of charcoal mixed with
ashes and salt. The screenings Of soft
coal are often relished by hogs and are
good for them.
It is best to feed no sour food to hogs
that are upon clover. If they have plenty
of pure water, a good clover pasture, with
very little corn, they will grow and make
gook it pork. Though some might think
a wasteful way to feed, we should, if
feeding whole corn, shell and scatter it
considerably have upon the ground, in order
to the hogs pick it up and eat more
slowly Every and get the whole benefit of it.
feeder ought to know that his
hogs In digest other what grain is given them,
for no his feed. wgy One does^bp.get othet*thing, full to returns get the
whole profit of hog raising the pastures
ought to be so arranged that they cau bo
plowed after being used a year or two
and a good crop of corn taken from
them. Can then be seeded to clover
ot again. and In this way you have a rotation
crops time.— are pretty sure to got heavy
ones every Farm, Ficbl and Stock
man.
Dairy Rules.
1. Milk from heaithy cows only should
bo used, and not until at least four days
after calving.
2. Any harsh treatment that excites
the cow lessens the quantity and injures
the quality of her yield.
3. Cows should be allowed an abun
dant supply of wholesome, suitable food,
and as much pure water as they will
drink.
4. A supply of salt should be placed
where the cows have access to it every
day.
5. Cows should not be permitfed to
drink stagnant, impure water, nor to
turnip eat cleanings tops, from liorso stables, leeks,
give the milk nor offensive anything that would
an taint.
0. All milk vessels should bo thor
oughly then cleansed; first being well washed,
scalded with boiling wator, and
afterward sufficiently aired to keep them
perfectly sweet.
7. Cows should be milked with dry
hands, been and only after the udders have
washed or well brushed.
should 8. Milking be should be done and milk
ing air is kept only where the surround
pure and free from all objec
tionablo and tainting odors. Milking in
a foul smelling stable or yard imparts to
milk an injurious taint. Sour whoy
should nevor be fed, nor should hogs be
kept ■tand. in a milking yard, nor near a milk
9. Tin pails only should be used.
10. All milk should be properly
strained immediately after milking, and
for that purpose a detached strainer is
preferable 11. to a strainer pail.
In preparing milk for delivery to
a cheese factory, it should immediately
after straining be thoroughly aired by
pouring, dipping orstirring. This treat
ment is as beneficial for the morning’s
milk as for the evening’s, and is even
more necessary when the weather is cool
than when it is warm.
13. In warm weather all milk should
be cooled after it has been aired, but not
before.
13. Milk kept over night in small
better quantities—say in tin pails—will be in
condition than if kept in larger h
quantity When in one vessel
14. both messes of milk are con
voyed to the factory in one can, the
mixing ing’s of the morning’s with the even
milk should be delayed till the milk
wagon reaches the stand.
15. While the milk is warmer than
the surrounding air it should be left un
covered, a,cl when colder it may
advantage Mjlk be covered.
tectcd 16. from pails the and cans should be pro
should rain, and milk stands
be constructed to shade the cans
from the sun
share 17. Only of strippings honest milk with its full
should be olfered;
Violation of this requirement leaves the
patron liable to a heavy penalty.- 1 7
Western Fanner. ‘
Farm tm«l Garden Motes.
Clover makes the very best hay.
T . i wc ii and i make each motion
>
Milk needs i espociffltare ; and .
from all filth. protection
Cleanliness on the farm does more for
its excellence than the expenditure
“ oac /
. _ . . b ,
SSSCS 3 S 4 PJW - -
Animals are constajpOy growing fatter
or poorer, and it is.iug*he baffler's inter
est to note which IniyAhe^rowth goes.
Before manures can produce their full
and land profitable must bo ma<|C cfifectai^o by the drainage soil, the
other ’ irry or
meaus.
The extensive use of ensilage upon any
farm is chiefly a question of convenience
and economy, which local conditions
must decide.
It pays to produce the best. An in
ferior article is always sold at a loss,
while the man who has the best cows,the
best butter, the bed beef, the
poultry, well dressed; or the best but
ter, put up in neat packages, always
sells his g oods at a profit.
~A« tori for cattle, as well as other
kinds of farm stock, eusilage forms a
good aud and very cheap substitute for roots,
its condmiental effects are especially
P ’i’t re Bu t lhe VT 1 ensilage crops
f failto fill rn it, the pi , are of the root crop in a
judicious farm rotation.
A silo or two, well built, but not too
large or too expensive, will bo con
vement and economical on mod farms,
to convert waste products into edible
forage, and to save crops which at other
tunes might be lost, if not to preserve
some crop specially grown f or ensilage,
in iced mg. the best results follow a
moderate ration of ensilage, ra-her than
its entire substitution for dry, coarse
fodder. Except in the case of animals
fed to maintain their weight, ensilage
cannot be recommended as a substitute
for more than half thy long forage con
sumed.
Several reports of death from hand
ling blackleg animals diseased with glanders or
these contagious are reported, diseases If the virus of
enters the
gELnsvrV ir-i «■?"”<!" * si, rr?,'
j <nowD - and * ou ? bt t .° bo carefully
bourne . mind, . and neigbors 1 ignorant
m
of the nature of these diseases cau
tioned.
old Kentucky breeder places salt
as first in importance as a preventive of
cholera among swine. He also claims
that *alt, all substances, is the best
promoter against of digestion as well as an an
the plan of salting worms. all He his has adopted
animals in
watertight 'lt hand. troughs, keeping a supply of
8f l on is fed with continually. Some char
c ® a salt to swine that are
closely penned, and he gives ashe3 occa
sionally under all conditions,
Mysterious Warnings.
; We see and hear through the medium
of the whole body. Close or bandage
your visual eyes ever be so healthy tightly, and if the
organs radiations of
light, and even forms and scenery, will
singly the or panoramically appear. Stop
cars ever so well and still sound is
not shut out. There have been well
accredited tions to closed signalizing eyes, and warning the clairaudient appari
nerves have repeatedly, when the ears
have been artificially stopped, heard
warning tion both words. In their natural condi
eyes and ears have seen and
heard remarkable things. Lord Broug
ham and John Wesley had their experi
ences, and l’roctor, the astronomer, has
averred his belief in such marvels. The
American Psychical Society investigated
the ease of a man at Oil City, Penn.,
who, which on had approaching suddenly a clock in his room
wound heard the voice stopped, his although brother
up, of
at “I’m Grand Rapids, Mich.,utter the words:
gone, I’m gone i” The next day he
received a telegram that his brothcrdied
at that time, and four days afterwards
received a letter stating that the last
words of the dying man were; “I’m
gone I I'm gone!” The British Psychical
living Society narrates the cases of two sisters
miles apart, and who at night met
in their carriages at the cross-roads on
their way to their mother, who had ex
pressed which the a dying daughters wish to see them and
had heard at night.
The evidence is cumulative. So, also, is
cumulative the testimony relating to the
transference of sounds of consolation to
living India, persons. hoard the Jessie Brown, while in
Scotch pipers of Gen
eral Havelock inarching to the rescue of
Lucknow when no one else heard a
sound. The quick cars of some Edin
voices burgh people are said to have heard the
in the air which told that King
dames lay dead on Floddeu Field with
many The Indians a knight and noble around him.
have acute cars and aver
that they hear voices constantly by which
they arc guided. The emotions are
mysterious, but we know, that they
quicken preternaturally the the senses, and
especially sense of hearing. There
are ears that cau detect coming footsteps
when others are deaf to them as posts,
There are hearts that feel the approach
of loved ones .—Neio York Mercury.
How to Cure Hiccoughing.
A company of young people, who had
evidently bition visited the Wild West exhi
ou Staten Island, boarded the
train at the South Ferry station. They
laughing were a jolly and set, and passed the time in
Grand joking when’ until the train
reached street, one of the
young women was seized with violent
hiccoughing. The attack was so aggra
vated that it seemed as if tlio girl would
choke.
, Various r . suggestions .. to , methods .. , of .
as
relief were-otfered One told her to
’*? ld attempted ber ^eath it and as long did as directed she could,
as lin
e l)C ?j l,n 0 tU:l ! y bv ld > but sb ?
cou „n < Anally r hold 1 n out no . longer, and
gave ve “‘. llbe 1 to a m, 8 hty ^cough which
80anded , an ex P los, ?, n .
of hci got a »ure cure,” ‘and interjected , . . _ one
: companions, if you’ll follow
S&f dvlc V -I 1 °' mrU ' ltee lts ef,icacy ’
Will you do it?” ,
Bbe He then Juccoughed stood m an the emphatic aisle and assent bade*
N 0X , be fac0 ra ^ ' sed t,s She arms obeyed straight implicitly, above
. ’
, head l an d placed H his hands so that
b: ho l rc, ,"U y « 3 s °/ tcd , tho the finger 0,1 tips < me of the
other. The . blushing but desperate
maiden did likewise, much to the
amusement of the people in the car.
*he cure was effected, for a moment
after her finger tips had touched the
spasm spasm when passed, passeu, and unu alighted had uau not returned
the party at Twenty
third street .—Mew York Telegram.
Tlie Muskrat in Commerce.
“What arc those things that look like
leather slippers, with the hair on?”
“Muskrat skins,” was ths answer.
“Why do they take that shape?”
“Because they are stretched for curing
light, over pointed stiff and shingles, dry that bee, they are so
you can shuffle
them almost as you would shuttle playing
cards.”
^. mc from? ”
A11al ^f.^? At !£? tlc coast
lainoto \ u'«ima. 1 hey are especially
of Delawar !
d ‘ 81 ^L i,j C ?‘;n S 1 el ° 19 . a ? rCat
, f s ,n tR U | re ^ 10 ! 1, \ omQ
the „,kni, n .„ • entirely << given
nv »r tn m at
^i£ j e i l )e imbca! l °?
, L. , tcr ' . t - th , , h ber
thousands! merchants ?.„ S
Country buy the
skins at from three to ten cents each and
sell them to our agents Many thou
sands of skins are sometimes bought
from lage. a They single merchant in a small vil
make up handsomely in
imitation of costlier furs.”
“What is done with the flesh of the
muskrat?”
“It is eaten. The colored people de
light in it. and many well-to-do whites
use it- They call it marsh rabbit when
it appears on the table. The flesh is
very dark, but sweet and tender. I’ve
seen it further displayed South.” in the markets of small
eitiw
CUBlOtJS FACTS. 2
_ England
Printing was introduced into
in 1474.
0
are Oq
irorn frnm iVrmmv Germany.
Bearing If dogs for their skms is practised ohoen
in . .Manchur.a . and Mongolia just ; n ct a as c sneep
farming m .go elsewhere.
An instrument of tortur... te (
boot,” was used in Scotland upon the
Covenanters about 1660.
It was not an uncommon practice foi
the poor in the Middle Ages to sell them
selves into slavery or to become slaves
by debt.
Between C hristmas, 1.52, and the same
than ^estimated 71,115 slaves were impor _tha
Jamaica alone.
James II. succeeded to the throne of
England February 6, 1685; abdicated
December 11, 1688; died in exile Sep
tember 16, 1701.
Twenty out of twenty-four sheep be
longing to Mr. Edwards, of Guildford
county, Va., were killed the other day
by a stroke of lightning.
The Dutch made the first settlement in
what is now the city of New York in
1614, but the settlement was captured
by the English half a century later.
Collegiate decrees are coeval with uni
versities. Masters and doctors existed
A. D. 836. Those in law are traced up
to 1149, in medicine to 1384, in music to
1463.
The first naval screw vessel was the
Archimedes, built for the successful English navy that
in 1840. 8he was so
comparatively afterward few constructed. ocean paddle steamers
were
A Georgia man lias a mule that is
driven to school on week days and to
church on Sundays, and is so intelligent
that if given the reins according he will go the straight day.
to his destination to 1
As late as 1839 there were as many as
3000 persons confined tor debt in the
prisons of Massachusetts, 10,000 in New
Maryland," York, 7000 in Pennsylvania, 3000 in
and a like proportion in other
States.
The editor of an Oneida (N. Y.,)
paper was shown a curiosity in the'
shape of a seven leaf clover. This is the
only one he ever saw, ana it brought to
mind the saying: “Find a seven and
prepare for Heaven.”
Most of our coffee comes from Brazil.
The grains are in the inside of a berry,
the size of a cherry. In Java, after the
grains shed, have where been removed, wind dries they are placed
in a the and cures
the plant. When it is ready for market
the coffee is brought to the shipping
ports on mules.
A farmer at Adairsville, Ga., while
near a spring the other day, observed a
rattlesnake liing at full length, with
head erect, and only a few feet away
was the a full grown rabbit, evidently under
charm of the snake. The latter was
quickly killed, when the rabbit fell over,
and in a few moments was dead.
Professor Angelo Motta died recently,
at Turin, Italy. He had for years been
at work upon a process by which, with
the aid of electricity, ho sloped to be
able to convert the human body into
solid metal. He had succeeded with the
arm of an infant and with various
smaller animals. His secret died with
him.
In the Mediterranean regions the
steep mountain slopes and hillsides are
terraced for the culture of oranges, lem
ons and olives, and these terraces are
held in place by rough stone walls, laid
up without mortar or cement. Behind
these loose walls, trees, shrubs and vines
are grown with the greatest success,
as they have been for centuries.
A silver crown piece, known as “the
petition crown” of the reign of Charles
II., fetched $1775 at a recent sale in
England. At the latest previous sale a
similar coin had broght only $1135. A
sovereign $5.35, fifty of Edward VI. ’s time brought
well a $760, shilling Oxford piece of the Crom
era an crown $685. A
penny of Ethelbald brought $330, and
other old pennies $90 and $-0 each.
The Mexican Congress.
W. E. Curtis says in his book, “The
Capitals of Spanish-America,” that in
appearance the members of the Mexican
Congress will compare favorably with
those of our Congress, and they are far
in advance of the average State legisla/
ture in learning and ability. The first’
features with legislative that strike bodies a visitor in familiar'
the United
States is the decorum with which pro-'
ceedings lous with are conducted, and the scrupu
care which every one is clothed.
IHuring the night sessions it is usual for
all" of the members to appear in evening
dress, which gives the body the appear
ance of a social gathering rather than
a the legislative members assembly. Nine-tenths of
tenth little are white, and the other
shows trace of Aztec blood,
There is never anything like confusion,
and the laws of propriety are never trans<
gressed. One hears no bad syntax or in
correct pronunciations language used in the speeches;
no coarse is and no wrah
g’es disgrace ever occur like those which so often
our own congress. The states
men never tilt their chairs back nor
lounge raised about the chamber; their feet are
never there is letter upon writing tHe railing going or desks; tha
no on;
lloor is never littered with scraps of
paper; no spittoons are to be seen and
fnf^which no conversation is permitted. Extreme
and the solemnity are alXys’short^and^ent which
funereal the prevails gives
a aspect to scene.
But everybody smokes. TheSecre
tar > T lights a cigarette at the end of a
roll call, and the Chairman blows a puff
0 f smoke from his lips before he an
nounces a Vision. i’ b « members are
constantly rolling cigarettes with
fingers, do and the people in the galleries
the same, so that a cloud of grav
lbe always hangs over the body, and
,u d^k cornersof the chamber ^ one
the t G a ' \ ir ®' les . Hut cigars are
“obacciT^’ ° ^ P ’ Pe3 ’ ^ D ° ° ne CheWS
The Czar of Russia is a great fisher
man, and he has just bought in Finland
a tract of land with a river swarming
with salmon. His imperial wife is also a
fair fly caster, and can manage a wicked
fish with and w
ease grace.
__________________
There is one place in Ventura County,
California, where there are 6000 acres
planted with beans.
Changed His Location.
It is not safe to help a baby in distress
die, and was i put into it. He didn’t
“a® live 11 ana i cried. = n Only , thp tne nurse „ fln( a a l
a few special £ attendants are permitted by
, ^ • but a man ser
vant , who , the time, •
was near at seeing
that his KiDg f was trying | ? to roll out of
tbe crad]e aj d threa en d t0 hurt Mm
self by screaming, lifted him out. For
j,j s zea j and kind-heartedness he was im
mediately Luckily the dismissed by the court willing, marshal, in
queen regent was circumstances,
view of the extenuating
t0 mitigate the man’s punishment, and of
gave him something else to do in one
the royal castles, where he could not have
any possible opportunity of lifting the
ki and breaking the law.
The food of the sultan of Turkey is
cooked by one man and his aides. It is
prepared in silver vessels, and each ves
sel is sealed by a slip of paper and a
stamp after the meal is cooked. These
seals are broken in the presence of the
sultan bv the high chamberlein, who takes
a spoonful of each dish before the sultan
tastes it. The annual expenditure of the
sultan’s household is over $41,000,000.
A Reliable Remedy.
Anncocit's Pohous Pbastehs never fail to
give speedy p:oof of tlieir efficacy as the best
external remedy for Weak Back. Rheuma
tism, Lumbago, Sciatica, Cold?, Coughs. Sore
Throat, Pulmonary and Kidney DiiHcu ties,
Malaria, Dy pepsia, Heart, Spleen, Liver an l
Stomach Affection*, Stains, and all Local
Pa ns.
They have been in use for over thirty years,
and their value has been attested by the high
est medioal authorities as well as by voluntary
and unimpeachable testimonials from thou
sands who have used them.
Ask for Ai.i.COCK’s.andlet no explanation or
solicitation induce you to accept a substitute.
American Royalty—King Corn and Queen
Cow. Long may they reign 1
The Little Seed.
A little seed lay in the carter’s path;
A little shoot bowed in the strong wind’s
A little wrath; shrub
Then stout tree grew, braved by its roots the held fast;
a all winter’s blast.
A little pain came and began to grow.
Then consumption laid all his brave strength
low.
Be wise in time. Check the little cough,cure
the little chill, dispell .the little pain, ere the
little ailment becomes the strong unconquer
able giant of disease. Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Medical t Discovery, taken in time, is a remedy
for these ills.
Sarah Bernhardt, the celebrated actress,
taken to drinking brandy to excess.
A Great Discovery.
Thtfact that castor-oil, as vile a medicine as
was ever discovered, has so long hel d its own as
alaxative.is because,until Hamburg Figs were
Now, discovered, however, no medicine could children take its place. Ham
ladies and take
burg Fig. Figs, Mack and Drug like them. 25 cents. Doso one
Co., N. Y.
The Mother's Friend, used a few weeks be
fore confinement, lessens llio pain and makes
labor quick and comparatively easy.
Now that the rush of the summer work is
somewhat over, we desire to eali attention to
some work matters for the fall looking months, forward and to through profitable the
winter. Write to B. F. Johnson & Co., 1009
Main St., Richmond, Va., and they will show
you how to do a grand work, which can he
made a permanent thing.
Forty years ago railroad trains were started
by a bugler playing, “I’d Be a Butterfly.”
The cleansing, antiseptic and healing quali
ties of Dr. Sages Catarrh Remedy are uu
equaled.
The centre of population of the United
States is near Louisville, Ky.
mte, Log Cabtns are neither
V, fashionable nor in de
pT,! mand, but they were more
comfortable and more
healthy than are many
modern Log dwellings. Cabin Hops War- &
ner’s
Buchu is a reproduction of one of the
best of the simple remedies with which
Log Cabin dwellers of old days kept
themselves well. Did you ever try
“""fill «ple fly’s Cream Balm,|
0 lD IN HEAD
W ELY BROS., £6 Warren St.,N.Y.
©M*i(5"@P SHOWS MOTHERS LABCpJysedarewmonili? 6lRIii FRIEND
S^^^¥^ teforo confinenaent. "Wniefvr lock
EL ^fel/LAlOR(5.
ROANOKE
Cotton and Hay
FRESS.
The best and cneapest made.
Hundreds in actual use.
Bales cotton /aster than any
mu jgR ; HI W OOD WOBKiS I A R d for O d Jf 6S AND Out
our
ton and Hay Press circulars.
Chattanooga, Tenn. B oxi.60
rsa M& 8 UN RFP EATING •RIFLE
38 ^ 44 cal Sew Model 1883
Winchester cartridge.
Work* easier, is simpler , Jiwt Out.
stronger, l ighter, than any other .
DtMTT BALLARD^ BUT TILL YOU UB IT.
BAIURY, 6*rd HUNTING for AND TARGET RIFIES.
mmffll Illustrated Catalorue. CT.^.
BI ARMS CO., Box soD, NEW HAVEN,
BICYCLES. _"\c u::.L all AwEnroA.v
HU lAar«e*trc*t4Tf I stock in America.
52 in OT Pi
50 in. 55. 35.00
4* iu. « ::: 50 00, «• 33.00
46 in. « 45.00, •« •• 30.00
j, “U i„ in. „ “ 40 00 ** ** 00
2 g^ ^ Shot Cun s P«vnl»w*
u. u„.
Seines, Tents. Brceoh-Ugvdlng double Shotgun at fO.OO;
10 *F***l- Si5i IWjnble-barrel -l’Mdnrs at $i Muzzle to $vi - io.-uiers Breach-loading at *5.50
Recovered
for Early
Texas
Her*, their Heirs. Settlers
gatien. HABTCHT or No charges AxJrix, for investi
A TAYLOR. Texas
..... Rlsir cPlIlc Great ____ English Gout
o!»,it rheumatic ani
° * 1 ' °“ n 14 PilU Remedy,
* ’ ’
~—
PiSOS CURE FOR CONSUMPTION
“ Just Hear Timt Child Scream! ”
fhSnd JSSfiS
sSsilSig a child needs physic, she fills
nauseous doSe, lays tlie little a spoonwith
some victim flat
0 n her lap, bolds his nose till he is forced to
open his mouth for breath, when yells." down goes
dreadful mess. Then come the
wonder/’ said Mrs. Smith, “Why doesn’t she
use Dr.Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellets?
They are effective without being harsh, and
“them'to £11 0 mychUdr^’’ ^ 1 “S A " d 60 do b
Mrs Davis
The cowboy is like a dramatic star— he is
supported by a stock company.
Conventional “ Motion ” Resolutions.
Ry Whereas, Co.) The M non Route (L. N. A. & O.
desires to make it known to the world
at link large Pullman that it forms the double connecting
of tourist travel between the
winter cities of Florida a-d t he summer re
sorts of the Northwest; and
surpa-sed, Wiereas, its Its elegant “rapid Pullman transit” system Buffet is un
and Chair service between Chicago Sleeper and
car
equalled; Louisville, Indianapolis and Cincinnati un
and
th^ ^b^jt’ ibi ra t es are as low as the lowest;
trip Resolved, it is That in the event of starting on a
Cormick, good pollen to con ult with If. o. Mc
Gen’l Pass. Agent Monon Route, 183
Dearborn St., Chicago, for full particulars. (In
any event send for a Tourist Guide, enclose 4c.
P' stage.)
A PERFECT
COMBINATION
Of harmless vegetable remedies, that will
restore the whole syste m to healthy action (
is absolutely needed to cure any disease
“for the disease thai affects one organ
weakens all.” Paine’s Celery Compound is
THIS PERFECT COMBINATION. Read
the proofs]
Paine’s »ndkidrey U troSl fc TbluKh“wo7ottl"8 e of
help me! Celery I Compound, and oh, in how it did
have so much faith your medi
cine, Ontario for I kuow what it did for me.**
Centre, N. Y. Mrs. J. J. Watson.
PAINE’S
CELERY COMPOUND
** For five years I suffered with malaria and
nervousuesa. I tried Paine’s Celery- Com
ties pound, and I can truthfully say that rh vebot
men completely d it, for I know cured it mo. to be I a cheerfullyrecom- good medicine.’*
Letter ^ Char. L. Stearns,
, Carrier, Station 13, Brooklyn, N. Y.
CURES ALL
NERVOUS DISEASES
Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Paralysis, Bilious
ness, Dyspepsia; Costiveness, Piles, Liver
Complaint, Kidney Trouble, Female Com
plaints, and all diseases arising from Im
pure Blood.
Cl. six for $5. See that each bottle bears tbe Celery
Trade Mark.
Wells. Richabdson & Co., Props., Burlington, Vt.
For the Nervous,
The Debilitated,
A&ed.
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 consistent
with thorough workmanship.
CATALOGUES MAILED FREE.
Correspondence Solicited.
WABEHOOMS,
Fifth Ayenue, cor. 16 thSt.,N. Y.
k COMMON SENSE
'1 CURE
For CATAEEH, EAY FETES,
Colds. Asthma, Bronchitis, and
all diseases of tlie Head, Throat
and Lungs. Ingenious combina
tion of medical science and co m
mon of sense. Continuous curre :nt
ozonized air penetrating, puri
f ving and healing. It cures where
ail other remedies fail. Bad Head
ache Lan d iu Five 9iaatee.
%^ ! ° r S^r^ 30 DAYS TR,Al -
5SSS- howto'lu^aSSLVoW, ^JSST' ^
Btamp.
Common Sense Cura Co.
•6 State St., OMcaco. IU.
w5 M
to j.
(i ef
SLCCRSSORS 5 k P
0*
O WHWB; 05 M
^5
H ■**.■■■ u f ' '* .
a
pq A> I'ilaoS- ®
xxair.
J0SN T. LEWIS & BEOS.,
f.i . WARRANTED PURE
CORRESPCXPENCE SOl.Ii I TEP,
SI OO to $300
r.g Agents and
horses profitably employed also.
Rpai re mo me mts may i e
A fe
SON'
GOLD Lire at home and make more money working for u« than
HESBRAHD FIFTH WHEEL.
ImprovMnoat. UER B R AN 1> CO.. Vruaonv O.
10,000 AGENTS WANTED to supply FIFTY MILLIONS Oxs lie w«r I
THE LIFE OF * ™" **’' ior of
BEN,HARRISON , —
read Ren llur and want Hen Harrison by eArae author. Selling imtnenselt/. By man ... -• pi-ii*.
Money Making book yet. OatHts 5(l ct« II UB BARD BROS.* 723 Chestnut
teas Wi iri
■
CAU^To JJx
name
ou ISifpliff tilebotto “. rut him down £?gSP"
mM
i
6 : •••4. l m
%
%jr -1
' M iggpisi
W. L. DOTJGL
$3 SHOE. GENTLES FOR
ssfS makes them 5 £r.xrs aa comfortable s&fflS auf weneSl
hand warrant^.” sewed shoe. buUOm Buy the best. L None DongS** ieiSfJ
8 -' 5 ° SH0E ^
All the above goods are made in Conms*
^1 L.Hoi'lM.AS,
DR. SCHENCK’S
SEAWEED TONI
has tying no agent, equal in nature as a toning andpd
,,, I /it helps the work of the MandrahPij disaj
L \ Sustains systems weakened by
Preserves the tone of stomach, livcrJ
" 1 bowels,
< .Purifies and enriches the blood, I
—
H 1 Encourages appetite and helpsnutritii
“* JJJ ! \Builds Braces the and organs strengthens till they the act whole natural
mi
Do not fail to send for Dr. Schenck’sti
and admirable treatise on the Longs, (
Liver, and the Stomach, with their disea
and cure. It abounds in excellent infom
tion, and will give you ideas about th
vital organs and the laws of health you ne
had before. Sent free.
DR.SCHENCK’S MEDICINE!
Pulmonic Syrup,
Seaweed Tonic,
Mandrake Pill;
PURELY VEGETABLE,
are for sale by all Druggists. Full print!
directions with each package. Address i
communications to Dr, J. H.Scheack&So:
Philadelphia, Pa. .
MARVELCUC
DI 80 OVERY.
Any brok learned in one n*iuiii»g.
Mind wandering cured#
Wholly Speaking unlike without artificial notes. systems.
Piracy condemned by Supreme Coin
Great inducements to correspondt-nce A class »i
Prospectus, with opinions of Dr. Win..
mood, the world-famed Specialist in Mina disc
lfaniel Greenleaf Thonnson, the gnat F0
Otfist. J. M. Buckley, I). I)., Editor of the C
t tan Advocate, K> chart Proctor the Sciei
and PBOF, others, sent LOlB&Xm post free by Fifth Ave., _ New T „ To
A. 237
_
Alax Engine on CornlsH Boner.
The cheapest, first
das*, horizontal En
gine in the market.
Engines of all kinds,
for Sawing, Thresh- In
ing, and Ginning, Saw and a
specialty. Grist Mill", Thre- wm
shing Machines, i.
etc., Send a for specialty. Illu»trat«d
Catalogue. Js ; ; .
A.H.FARQUHAB,
fc'jrfc, Teana.
Pennsylvania Agricultural Worts, York,
Farqahar’i Standard Enjineg audSur Silli
Send for Catalogue. PoitaMe, “
_ . and Aulemtiei
iionarv, Tractioa
ginesaapeciaitj. lVarrutedfqosl
open
Him
* SC'
Addren A. B. FABQUH1B A S0?f* Iork,PfcJ
cs gOSGOOD’] StaldJ
paid.°FuUy'V«rai'^l 0.
id -yy ; 9 1
f 3 TON $35.
, -....... . Other size; prop' 1 ' |
ately low. Agents well paid. Illustrated
free. Mention this Paper. Binghamton,^ „ -e
OSGOOD li THOMPSON,
LIES! M
•W»» I eX c^'s
Hapj MediciSx’o^ .' L’aio^ f
Syant’Bfcottoge, 45^ St.,
------------------------- . ys
. #
W w Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co.. ■
- .....Thirty-seven,
A. N-H..........