Newspaper Page Text
AGRICULTURAL
TOPICS TOPICS OF OF INTERFST n TERBsT RELATIVE RELAX! V E
TO FARM AND GARDEN.
1 R,n «« at which to apply salt to the
cunl is a critical one in cheese-making,
and requires a pretty acrurate test to dc
cide. There are several, the most cer
tain known being that soft peculiar feeling
buffurand as •‘velvetyequal Quantities of
being whey exuding on the curd
firmly squeezed in the hand: the
response to tin hot iron being 8 the flavor
of nice toasted cheese, etc Thc mois
tore of cheese consists of the water of
the and whey sti ! l remaining, the essential
some of the volatile oil derived
from the butter, and the butter fats In
n skimmed milk or \ery poor cheese the
proportion of whey is larm:, and when it
has passed its proper stage of ripeness
part of it will evaporate and the cheese
apparently mcr,-ly lose its quality, though it is
water it is losing. In full milk
or rich cheese the proportion is reversed,
ami the moisture being from richness
ihecheese c.c will improve improve bv by long lone- keen- keep
moisture Speaking generally, a cheese with little
is slow to ripen; with too much
moisture, it matures too soon. To know
the proper grist all through is the touch
stone of thech ese-inakcr s skill. If tho
curd is too moist it may be improved by
using k-ss rennet, or by keeping up
the slightly higher temperature, by breaking
curd finer before sia’d.ng, or by in
creasing being the quantity of salt. A cheese,
after kept in tl.e press for two
days or so, shoud be neatly bandaged
and removed to the cheese-room, one
end is then rubbed with melted butter,
the other similarly at tho first turning
on the shelves, a process which may be
repeated should with benefit. The cheese-room
be so constructed that certain
and easy control of the temperature can
be secured—about sixty-five degrees be
ing tho the average desired. Overheating be"
melts butter fats, and they then
Come rancid and spoil tho flavor of the
cheosc. Finally, turn daily and rub well;
a good cheese should have its surface
smooth and clean .—Prairie Fanner.
Petroleum as a Preservative.
Farmer A correspondent discourses of the Orange County
ou the use of crude
petroleum lows: as a wood preservative ns fol
“ t is claimed by some of those
who lmvc tried it that a fence post
painted with crude petroleum will last
much longer than those set without,
There are those again who claim that an
application does add of anything petroleum in their case
not to the length of
time the (tost will last. That Gils oil
docs contain protective properties is con
ceded by all who have used it to anv ex
tent. That it does not protect iii all ;
cases where applied to tence posts is no
doubt due to the difference in the Roil
and also to the condition of the post at
the time it was painted or coated with
the oil, for to soak a green post with ! 1
petroleum time, and set it at once is a waste of
and all posts should be thoroughly
seasoned before they are coated with oil
or any other protective, and never set
until dried through and through. A
coating add much of petroleum on shingles will
to their lasting qualities if
applied but tho after they are laid on the roof,
proper way is to dip the shingles
in the whole length before they are laid.
This can best be done by having the oil
in n trough large enough to dip tho ends |
of tho bunches in up to the middle, and
when they are taken out lay them on a
slanting PS Jf board that will save the drip- ;
1
»
Twenty-five this cents’ worth of oil applied i
in way will make them la*t twice
the length of time they ollie: wise wou'd.
1 would not advocate coating them on
the roof unlci-s they are already lain, in !
which ease nothing better can he done
with thorn. In applying petroleum or
any laid, other find paint to a'shingle roof aheady
you yourself in the same predi
l ament that Pat was when his employer
ordered him to grea-e the wagon. He
said he greased it ins de and out, but I
couldn’t get at the sticks the wheels
hung on. In applying oil to a sliinge I
roof after it is laid, von can’t get at Ute
■pot where it is most needed to make 3t
effective. A barrel of erudo oil and a
keg of brown metallic paint will pay in
the life they add in tho wood work t0
which they are applied and be worth ten
times what they cost in the neat tidy an
pearance of the fences, gates and out
buildings. from The petroleum can be ordered
any dealer in oils, and ought not
to cost more than eight cents with the bar
rel wells included, and in localities, dose to oil
it can often be bought for half the
price. The paint will cost from 3 to 5
cents quantity a pound iu accordance with
being for you small purchase, outside figure
lots. Never mix (mint
in the petroleum that is applied to
shingles, terial.” as it is only a waste of ma .
f Farm ami Garden Notes. |
A .... good garden . revest
is a paying
meet.
The general aspect of the dairy animal
is thinner, sharper and more angular
than the feeding animal.
When butter is gathered in the churn
in granular form it is never over-churned,
Bounding it after it is in a lump or large
mass is what over-churns it.
When the milk foams atul froths in
the churn, thc probability is that th
temperature is not correct; hence use
thermometer when churning.
At a recent meeting of the American
Bee-Keepers’ bers of experience Association, several mem
gave the cost of
producing honey. The abo.ft general cenu^ aver-um
of the estimates was teu
P«“" d - '
Potatoes Are dried, ns fruits are _
for use on shins and in mining
camps, where the fresh vegetables can
not be easily procuied. t he potatoes
are sliced and dried in a common
evaporator, just as mmles Vate, are .ilvc and whan
u.rf ,rc in ho„i.
gallon •' of Iko potiito bnefli lie |.ol.
a Ur in a tub over which he
B,... .»!««. for M.cral "acres oi e
.clic.1 test trill convino. th.
dairyman who has Dot tried it, that hie
cows are capable of consuming and di
Than'the^sual ailiwance'"^x^rimerlts
! the cows pays best, by noting whether
into fie p.
rr rhe i I[nwe it 7 Iar „ ™ g", 03 _ the follow
■ f mcthod f k,n ca! f
{“» K ' a<- 1 no ' T ^ c ( 8ay ?, t l iat ® „ ni "dien ? f the l plants a * a
are about , eight inches . high and have
‘° rm ™-woody stalks, make incisions m
Jhe/talks Ilfe ! nsert with 8rn the n11 l small ,lf (:u s blade of wood of a of the
. °f > ^’ , l ; , J
f. Ibis 1 ?® checks a , ma tin ! c growth, ani an< hard 1 ™ heads 0 •
w “ be formed.
kus In harvesting wheat almost every uni- one
noticed little heaps of straw
f “rmly a few inches in length and won
dcre ' 1 wliat could have been the cause of
if - It was the work of field-mice. 'I he
jj«le rodents did it to get the grain.
J hey gnaw off the stalk as h-gh as they
c«n reach, and it drops down endways,
the surrounding stalks prevent it from
filing over, the and head they reached. continue the
process until is Kab
^ ^ ^ Thejr work be
known by the pieces of straw being
k’nger and they cease operations before
the grain is fully ripe.
-----
‘ Wn.l S| 1 ,n NWU’mmmsitinn Novo1 t0,nI>0sltl ° n *
There are cases on record, says thq
New York Sun, where men have written
twenty-four or thirty-six hours on a
stretch just as stories are told of pro
longed sittings at the gaming table. Dr.
-iolinson wrote “Kassclas” in a week,
stimulated by gallons of strong tea, but
he touched more posts and trees as he
walked the streets after this perform
unco than ho • had over done belore, and
thus walked off his nervousness. Upon
one or two occasions Henry J. Raymond,
the founder of the Times, is said to have
written steadily for fifteen or twenty
hours, and when Matt ( arpenter began
the preparation of a brief he did not put
down his pen until the work was fin
ished, and sometimes the strain lasted
f 01 ' thirty-six hours,
pie Probably the most conspicuous exam
of the power to write hour after hour
was Sir Walter Scott, whose feats of
rn P ;d composition of his Waverly novels
< ! «ised even greater amazement to his
f r *< !| >ds than the stories themselves,
That is a picturesque description given
1,y 0110 of bis friends who sat at a win
dow directly opposite the room in which
^ho ‘■' c °tt Wizard’s was working. face, Ho could not see
but he could see his
lmml as it passed over the (taper hour
alt > r hour, and when after an absence of
!l window, 1, w hours, lie the friend returned to his
. again that white hand
saw
moving, with steady, unvarying mo
notony, across tho sheets, and it seemed
*° bim like the ghastly hand of death,
as, in one sense, it was.
Tim average writer of tales or novels
from MOO to 2000 words a day
as a sufficient day’s work, although there
i8 11 great difference between writers,
Anthony Trollope set himself a stent,
sometimes a thousand, sometime; fifteen
hundreds words u day, and always did
i[ - Thackeray, on the other hand,
sometimes had prodigious hursts of
energy, in which he accomplished the
writing of many pages in his best man
net. and with scarcely an interlineation,
and then again he would write scarcely
a dozen lines in a day, and these were
fall <>f zigzags and black lines and cor
rections.
" 1
Matt. Carpenter’s Dramatic Death.
„ tho .hstingmdied n™ American »< »*«• jurist, were
s'Dknigly mid nitcnsely dujmatie He
walche ! 1 U ?P « f dlsease 0I } himself _
tt U!l U1 ; allst ' vatc , hc8 experiments
or
- wt ‘.Anneal . reaction. lie
Wle " a
V-T 1 . , h,s f', sea se hud 1’ a f ed to lt8
third or incurable stage, . and ho gratified ,
a F ur l 0, ‘^normal and painful to Ins
f, '!". nda ;. l ’ y f^cli.ug himself the tests
'? ,uch * ho phy sicians make to indteate
the progress of the disease lie pro
CU,a ; J ® ho “«» ls and made tests h.mself
wlth the interest but personal mdiller
‘' l>co of a voun .^ P h J; slc ‘ a! > •« a la bom
-
t0, '- v ’ So m ?' l, "" s ho Wo uld sa v to his
tins -
partner: , “At rate there , are two
'?°^ h 1 ora S ai « he would assert
'? at ! m,ure . and mcdimno had set back
the d.seasc a tittle One morning after
jamming a test which indicated that
diwoiution was not far away he spoke
ot 0!llra 1 / t° his partner, discussed it
as ho wo uld , a I ,luae of testimony that ho
“‘tondod . , introduce , law and
to la a case,
(hen .'l" ,ct !y ,u ? d ? 8om ® n,,t es. cf a
■!«««»“• "Mended to deliver ,. m the
He cnl0 "‘d the Senate chamber,
h,s fi,co " h k tor than bis hair, bantered
“d . pkxed , fellow Senator the
a l.ea a ou
? ub ,^ ct of «t«MishinB a consular court
1,1 h !"f’. With one hand in his pocket
and a l Ins exquisite melody of voice
and charm of diction, lio delivered a
speech on tins unusually dry subject
that entranced the Senate, and then as un
concernedly lunch,'’put as though going to the res
taurant for on his heavy, fur
lj ne d overcoat, stood at the door o'f tho
Senate a moment, looking around for
what he knew was his last glance and
he quitted the Senate forever, And while
in was making the held'in speech with his baud
his pocket, he it the vial which
contained the test that told the story of
Uis speedy death .—New Tori Sun .
• «— ■
A Cow Adopts a Cattish,
Gn the farm of Jacob Groff, who lives
near Zodiac Springs, Mo., is a large
Pwid where cows are in the habit of
landing acted during the day. One of the
cows so strangely when at the
l ^ ,on<i that S “C attracted the attention of
r ’ Go « aud the faun hands. She
Z il thC WRlC I au 1 :° ur °, r 80
l, ef°re the other ,D cows, aud, , after , wading .
out a cer **in lowing, depth, though wou,d stop and
commence ^ ®'? iate as aft sll ealUng to a
ca -‘ m ra y r ° w °uld re
£ am Uertectly . quiet . , and j seem contented.
cause could be assigned for her
So,' day^ast ,„„ k shUaswatcltcd S’
o„e week very
J « SS
into
Cl BIO US FACTS.
A talent of gold was $13,809.
A shekel of silver was about fifty cents.
A violin made of clay has been on ex
,
which a soft and beautiful effect is pro
r- l ’
A niovmg . tram knocked . . the , tad ... off . a
, M.ssoun r calf without m any way hurtin
0
the rest of the animal.
“Lover’s ink,” warranted to vanish m
twelve hours after use, leaving the papei
blank, is said to be a Western invention.
The other day at Westport, Conn.,
jr r . ^£it c liell and Miss Lewis got married,
ami went off canoeing upon a bridal
tour.
An organ in a San Francisco church is
sa id to have been benefited, rather than
j„ j Hro a ( Jy the accidental discharge of a
bullet into it.
A cat at Norwich Falls, N. Y., is
briui , u * her kittens on a diet of
fj , T ,, wh3ch she catche8 for t j ie m
j n near swamp
w t Deep Deep Ri Kiver, ver Conn _onu two two men men. -
shoemakers , and both 82 years old re
S l hou? 6 ^ °
3 -V th- same h ^
Lightning , , . struck , a pine tree on the
farm of WFbpann of Webster county
Ua.. and lulled twenty hogs that
taken shelter under it.
Sharks have appeared at the mouth of
the Mersey, England, aud
small boys are wearing bowie knives
when they go in swimming,
fathers A Clinton and (IowaUiaby grandmothers, has two grand- great
two two
besides giandmot hers and one great-grandfather, it death.
parents, to pet to
A . ....... big willow tree in an upper New
A ovk town was blown a foot from the
perpcnumular in a late storm, but little
by little bus gone back to uprightness.
the farm of B. Peacock, Thomas
vnle, (Jo.., lightning has struck the same
building three times within one week,
and ihe building is now about used up.
A university is said to have been
founded at Bologna by Theodosius about
43- : , but the real date of the establish
ment of the University of Boulogne was
111;!.
Lincoln Chestnut aud Edwina Arrow
smith were wedded at Grafton, Neb., a
few weeks ago. The bride's reply to the
usual formula: “Do you take this Chest
nut?” was the a painful occasion. strain ou the sol
emnity of
huckleberries A decidedly gathered rare fruit is the white
this week in
Blooming ( rove, Penn. The berries
are about the size of a wild cherry, and
are creamy white. They are very sweet.
Whether a new variety or a freak of na
ture we are not informed.
The old belief that more light-haired
persons than dark become insane has
gone the way of the Other ancient de
lusions. Out of bio patients tvhc are
Asylum being treated Lhi'adelph’.a in the Kirkbridgc all Insane
in except four
are of decidedly dark complexion.
Nine years ago a Mrs. Manuiug, of
Paris, Ill., vowed that if her son married
a certain young lady who was objection
able to her she would go to bed and stay
theie until she died, i he niairiage too ».
place, and the mother, true to her reso
Ilition iiiiu.n, never novel icii left iici her bed ueu until until she sue was was
borne to her cohlU.
There is said to be a smokehouse iu
the southwestern part of Madison
county, Fla., that is a veritable bee hive,
and from which large quantities of honey
are taken throughout the year by mere
liquid ly cutting honey the which comb and from catching The the
pours it.
bees have sealed the interior of the house
with comb.
The Chinese frequently place little
metal idols within the shells of mollusks,
lciliOMiig them several years afterward
covered with a substance resembling
pearl; they also lay strings of small
peat shells, Is. separated taking by them knots, inside the
and ou out, after a
lapse of some years, obtain large aud
costly pearls.
About twenty years ago Mrs. Benja
mill Braughn, of Atlanta. Ga., cut the
Imir from the head of her little two-year
old child, and saved one curl about an
inch and a half in length. A few weeks
later the child became ill aud died.
Testerday IVira. Braughn opened the
in which she had laid away the little
ringlet, and was astonished to find that
it had grown to be two feet iu length.
Pliciiomenai Memories.
Cardinal Mezzofanti, the linguist, who
was said to have known a hundred
languages, word declared had that he never for
got a he once learned. To a
friend who congratulated Leydea on his
remarkable memory he replied that he
ofteu found it a source of great incon
venicucc. On the friend expressing
surprise he exclaimed that he had ofteu
wished to recollect a particular ex
pression in do something lie had read, but
could not it until lie had repeated the
whole passage from the beginning ° to the
expression lie desired to recall.
An English clergyman mentions a
mau who could remember the day of the
burial of every person who had died in
the parish during thirty-five years, and
randThe names S
was'he^intelle'CtuaUy'uiat h^oull not
be trusted to feed himself .—New Tori
Prm.
The First Railroad Ticket.
J, T . * „ ] t f ”h« lonclud ... lffnchel ,
pi ' • n lougaud lj inches
vil K, ' . u '
“lyKRfOOL TO MANCHESTER. •
Paid at 2 5s. o’clock from Railwav St^fon
fid. JH. Agent
N. B.—When seated, bs pleased to hold this
^ketmyoui- hand t,U called for.
On the other side:
NOflCB.— No gratuity allowed to be taken
*"“•**
t,,re ot « >" ™»™=ript; thed,,
% mont ^ are ""Passed by a separate
j "vj‘hS.=d ‘mI U ? ?» to w5>ichtll
i boiled. “
tell in Lore with Eagle-Eye.
The talk of Paris i just now is a rora
ance in , Jif6) of hioh the heroine is
a young Englishwoman and the kero no
redskins have come over to the big an
nual * air °* Nemily, outside raris,
where they daily and nightly amaze and
amuse Parisians by their diabolical j ells,
horsemanship and their prairie
pranks generally. It appears that dur
f ng one of the representations given by
the troupe in England a young lady of
who was present became enamoured
Eagle-Eye. She shortly afterwards and
disappeared from her home, her
parents learned on inquiry that she had
gone away to France with the Indian
troupe. A detective was sent to Paris,
and be, accompanied by the Commissary
of Police of the Neuilly Distrust, went
to the camp of the redskins at the
POTte-MmUot, where the of young Eagle^e. lady
was discovered m the tent ^
Martin the Commissary, and the En
gkeh detective had much trouble with
tho savage who.assumed a threatening
aspect, and would have shown fight but
for the intervention of Mexican Joe
E^-Eyo was almost foam
mg at the mouth, aud threatened to kill
the Commissary if he led the young lady
away The detective, however taking
advantage quickly of the girl general his confusion,
seized the m arms, ran
with her to a vehicle, and was speedily
driven off, leaving M. Martin to deal
with the redskin, as best lie could,
Simplifying Matters.
The bridesmaid and the usher have
gone out of fashion for the present.
weddings will be arranged so
(bat the bride attention and groom shall have no
riva , s for the of the onlookers,
Thc regulalion ^ society wedding J lias be
CQme latc guch expei ve thing
that more than one young man, matrimo
nially inclined, has dreaded the bill he
mus t p J, a y J f or a gupper * to his ushers, pres
ent8 t t he game tc And the father
who has to foot the bills pertaining to a
daughter’s the marriage will be glad to have
extravagance of the ceremony re
d ucs d to a minimum.
It was his first visit to the city. As he
stood on the curbstone shaking his sides
with laughter, he was accosted by a po
liceman, who said; “What’s the fun,
stranger?” “Funl Can’t you see it?
Just look how that thing (pointing to a
watering cart) leaks; why, the man
won’t have a drop left when he gets
home.”
Symptoms of Catarrh.
Dull, heavy headache, obstruction of the
nasal passages, discharges falling from the '
head into' the throat, sometimes profuse, wa
tery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious,
ing ill the ears, deafness, hacking or coughing
to clear the throat, expectoration of offensive
breath is offensive; smell and taste are im
Efentai eral debility, ^preS^ThSl^oulhTndgim if you have all, consuler
or any
ferin^^ cated disease
your has become, the greater the
a umber
the above symptoms, result in consumption,
and end in the grave. No disease is so com
understood, mon, more deceptive and dangerous, or less
physicians. or Five more hundred unsuccessfully dollars treated, reward by i3
cannot cure. Remedy sold by druggists, at
only 60 centa -
“Electric prostration” is a new disease. It
troubles workers under the eleclric light.
The Mother's Friend, used a few weeks be
fore confinement, lessens the pain and makes
labor quick and comparatively easy.
English and. capital will is buying great up American
breweries, organize a trust.
>v0)na ... M „d e «y.
delicacy Many women from consulting arc prevented physician by feelings in of
a those
most serious results are often caused by this
neglect. To such persons Dr.Pierco's Favorite
orders to whlcli women are peculiarly subject,
a physician. “Favorite Prescription” is Iho
SessesTnd positive guarantee aflmcnte, from sold by the drugg&ndMm manufacturers,
tllal SVrapp^. lt w V l ,\ ^ lvc lefunded satisfaction bee in every case, or
’ ^“tee ou
nUFSing anU
”* or interest the Ladies.
to
Every woman afflicted with Womb Diseases
or Painful Monthly Irregularities, is requested
to send her name and address to Mrs. Mary
ation, A. Brannon, how Atlanta, cured. Ga., and get inform
to be
(.liMii ate Indigestion,
Obstinate cases of indgestion, constipation,
piles, or liver complaint, are easily cured by a
few Hamburg Figs, as may be proved at small
cost, -5 cents. Dose one Fig. Mack Drug Co.,
N. V.
Best, easiest to use and cheapest, Piso’s
Remedy for Catarrh. 50c.
T __ r, -T' c au ^ , ard
’
G , w™ 6
or ele«raiir w u ^J. cy "^ re
Wf®'® RfiS'-llv f ^„„ ic*’° . n C hab ^ P loneeis atl0D3 °* Am tbe ei
A^r JgZgrfy "' 7,7),^ n i )ea,nens .°_ ^ f nol> W ,T e
health, strength m and endu™! Their
Warnert''u^Scan^ ^
Grasses-South.
- to the—
ATLANTA SEED CO.,
; S3 Pencil Ire? St., . ATI, tXTA, \
VOI WII.l.glVE MONEY,
Pain, Trouble
iiid will DURe
CATARRH
BY I7.ilMJ
E ' y ’ S Bain1 '
^^J^Apply NfcrS* UIMJK 1 .V BROS Balm into eacli nostril.
. K WarrenM..N.Y.
LD j.liE,
m 10 N"
Badly Scared.
“Polhemus, had you look like a ghost.
Have you a spell of sickness?” “No,
Magruder, there’s nothing the matter
with me but my microscope.” “Your
microscope? What do you mean?” “I
was a happy man, Magruder, until my
last birthday. My wife made me a pres
ent of a microscope, and in an evil hour
I took it and began examining the arti
cles of food we eat aud drink. Magru
der, I’ve lived for two weeks on distilled
water. It’s the only thing that isn’t full
of nameless horrors. ”
Haw to Overcome the Dangers of Ex
posure.
Francis O’Reilly, the well known Ifvery man
of No. 18 Prince street. New York, says of All
cock’s Porous Plasters:
“For the last forty-two years I have been en
gaged in the livery and hacking business. I
am gi eatly aided by my four boys. We are
much exposed to tho weather, and we have
found Allcock’s Plasters of very great ser
vice. Wo use them as chest protectors, placing
one on the chest and one on the pit of the stom-.
ach. They not only ward off the cold, but act
as a tonic.
We are frequently affected with rheuma
tism, kinks in the hack, and pains in the side;
but one or twoof Allcock’s Plasters quickly
cure us. My wife and daughter have -been
using Allcock’s Plasters for weak back and
think the world of them. I have now been
using them for twenty years, and always have
a box in the house.”
eight-hour The labor rule. pre-s continues to agitate for the
Jack and Jill each took a pill,
Old-fashioned kind—full grown;
Jack’s went down—but with a frown—
Jill died from “cause unknown.”
Smiles will supersede many frowns, and
many discomforts will be unknown, when Dr.
Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative i’diets entirely
supersede, less efficient as pill they bid fair forefathers. to do, the large and
of our Every day
they most gain ills abound! new laurels! Most popular when
Chevreuii. his the great French scientist, has
just passed 103d year.
If afflicted with Fore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp
son’s Eye-vyater. Druggists sell at 2.k\ per bottle.
I
yffP
Brilliant!
Durable!
Economical!
Diamond Dyes excel all others
in Strength, Purity and Fastness.
None other are just as good. Be
ware of imitations, because they
are rnaide of cheap and inferior
materials, and give poor, weak,
crocky colors. To be sure of
success, use only the Diamond
Dves for coloring Dresses, Stock
ings, Yarns, Carpets, Feathers,
Ribbons, &c., &c. We warrant
them to color more goods, pack
age for package, than any other
dyes ever made, and to give more
brilliant and durable colors. Ask
for the Diamond and take no other.
A Dress Dyed A } FOR
A Garments Coat Colored Renewed J IO
CENTS.
A Child can use them!
At Druggists and Merchants. Dye Book free.
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CQ„
BURLINGTON, VERMONT,
a CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. vt?
al Best in Cough Syrup. Tastes good, Use n
time. Sold by druggists.
C O N aUMPTfONS^Li;
a
I believe Piso’s Cure
for Consumption saved
my life.— A. H. Dowell,
Editor Enquirer, Eden
ton, N. C., April 23, 1887.
PISO % i i
cine The is best Piso’s Cough Medi- |
Cure tor
Consumption. it Children
take without objection. a
By all druggists. 25c.
Pt&Q^C-y-: E
R CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS,
ea al Best Cough in Syrup. Sold Tastes good, Use iJ
time. by druggists.
JOKES
^ fyn'iusHsxg HE
Iran Levers, Steel Hearings, Brut
Tore Lctm and Beam Box tor
S 80 .
K 3 Uvery . elie Seale For free pri«j# Hal
mention this paper and addreaa
BINGHAMTON. N. V
FLIES pas f Caleb 111 cm alive with
s
tm-cr, ,57 llcehmun-St ect, Nrw York.
Bteir’sFilis.'EoSI.S.r Oval Box, 31; round, 11 I’ill*. 1
—
P ft? ^ Lire at home an J make more money working for ns than
»t anvjhincelse in th<? world Fithep fox. Costly outfit
free. Terms I REK. Address, Tkce k Co., Augusta, Maine.
I^OI.OUA O few l«r it. (lonsiimplivesand Dr. Bill Buulder, Anthmat
Wics. Send 2c. rLETT, Col.
and n 1 Recta! DisoiSdC^
tvea ted No by a pain!a.<s pr .*
cess. . No loss loss ultimo t>f timo trum
business. No knife, tig
or ca rustic. A E.ADIC
guar anteed in every
treated. Reference given, iveu.
Dr. R. G. JACKSON, 42)4
Whitehall St. f G.i.
to 1 live e in dollars in wuo m has a inv« Rubber sted from Coat, three and A (not style) a garment that will keep (
ut Ins first half hour's experience m Q A B SBB BB bim dry in> the hardest storm. It w
hardly a storm u finds better to protecUon his sorrow than that a mos- it is IMf & B ca^d “SUCKER,’’a TOWER’S FISH familiar BRAND to every
quito netting, only feels «s name
not chagrined umh m Cow-boy aii over the land. With them
feels r.t being if so do badly taken in, but also Q s &S&} rak B the only perfect Wind and Waterproof
he es not look exactly like Coat is “Tower s Fish Brand Slicker.
d Abk o'-snot tor the have “ FISH the Fisa BRAND” Slickus b H H9 1^9 and lake no other. If ycur storekeeper Mas*.
brand, send for descriptive catalogue. A. J. Tower, 20 Simmons St., Boston,
BLOOD AND BRAIN.
Pure blood is what oils the machinery of life
eases every movement of the body, removes stiff
ness of the joints, drives out pain from the nerves
stimulates the brain, protects the liver and kidnevi
from irritation, enables physical exertion without
fatigue, prolongs life, and makes men and women
perfect in health and feature. Good blood and
good brain are inseparable. Aim to keep the blood
pure by using the only true blood remedy BUR
(Botanic Blood Balm.)
Miss S. Tomlinson, Atlanta, Ga., says:
“ For many years I have been afflicted
matism combined with with rheu
severe kidney troubles, indi
gestion and nervous prostration,
lilieumatism Several physicians were em
ployed and numerous patent
medicines resorted to without benefit. At last l
began the use of B. B. B., and its effect was like
magic. Rheumatic pains ceased, my kidneys were
relieved, and my constitution improved at once/
Z. T. Halierton, Macon, Ga., writes: t
“ Three years ago I contracted blood poison. ‘
a J
applied to a physician at once, and his treatment
came near killing me. I employed an old physician
and then went to Kentucky. |
tt not r. Springs ■ then went to Hot
remained Springs and
two months, but noth
ing seemed to cure me permanently, although tem
porary relief was given me. I returned home a
ruined man physically, with but little prospect of
ever getting well. I was persuaded te try B. B. B.,
and to my utter astonishment it quickly healed
every ulcer.”
W. C. McGaughey, Webb City, Ark., writes:
“ I owe the comfort of my life to a use of B. B. B,
I was troubled with blood poison
Bad Blood !ar five or Six years, and found no
relief equal to that given by this
valuable remedy.”
Mrs. Emma Griffiths, Unitia, Tenn., writes:
“ The doctors said my boy twelve years old had
scrofula. His knees were drawn up and joints were
Scrofula stiff, and for three years he had been
unable to walk. One bottle of B.B.B,
has done him so much good he can
now walk, and his pain has ceased. Its action on
my boy has been pronounced most wonderful.” (5)
DR. SCHEMCK’S
|VS AN DRAKE P?LLS
Are the safest, surest and speediest
vegetable remedy in the world for alt .
Diseases of the Stomach and Liver,
BECAUSE
They clean the linings of Stomach and bowels
Reduce congestion excited in all the organs,
Heal irritated and parts,
Promote healthy action and sweet secretions,
Correct the bile and cure biliousness, .
Make pure blood and give it free flow,
Thus send nutriment to every part. i
, Do not fail to send for Dr. SchencVs new
and admirable treatise on the Lungs, tie
Liver, and the Stomach, with their diseases
and cure. It abounds in excellent informa
tion, and will give you ideas about these
vital organs and the laws of health you never
had before. Sent free.
DR.SCHENCK’S MEDICINES
PULK0NIC SYRUP, i
SEAWEED TONIC,
MANDRAKE PILLS,
PURELY VEGETABLE.
■re for sale by all Druggists. Full printed all
directions with each package. Address
communications to Dr. J. H. Schenck & Son,
Philadelphia, Pa. ^ •
MEMORY MARVELOUS
DISCOVERY.
Any book learned in one reading#
Mind wandering cured.
Wholly Speaking like without artificial notes. systems.
mi by Cour
Piracy condemned correspondence Supreme classes.
Great inducements to A U
Prospectus, with opinions of In*. Win* BIB*
tumid* the world-famed Specialist in Mind diseases, Psychol*
l>.‘tniel Greenleaf Thompson# the great of '
ogist, J. M. Buckley, !>. I)., Editor thc hdfcntwi.
tian Advocate, R;cliaf I Proctor
and others, sont post froo by Fifth „ „ >ew lork. .
PROF. A. LOISETTE, 237 Ave. f
COMMON SEE
IF 0'CJ2^23
4 ? For CAT1BBH, BAY FEVER,
w
ache CB»**d Fir? HianU#.
Too can be cured while sleep- BENT ON
Ing; you ean bo cured ■while 30 TDI&L |
reading kind of or labor. performing Illustrated any
___
book showing origin of and . ’ ? * • w
how to cure all diseases of the
FUKR Head, Throat aud Lungs sent ire
upon receipt of 2 cent m.
istamp.
Common Sense Cure Co. i r
iO State St., Chicago, Ill.
sisa FARA1ERS t.KU.VKS, Wo«' run.™.
SAW MILL.
Circular Heje « Improved Saw l>it!lK| |
With Universal
Log- linear Beam Recti*
Simulta
•nc.ons Set Work me S
and Double Ec- 72 [e
centric Friction
Feed. Manufac
h ITlON \VO«Ki* J«AXAtM. N. C ;
SALEtI !
AMERICA*! ’
^.3 BICYCLES. WE PELL ALL
m I Vj C ourVjce
,'f l e “ ««•«»
62 in OTTO pcto price 0 .W
60 in. “ "
48 iu. ...... BOM. “ *’ .. 30.00
46 tn. <« it •• 45 on 27-0®
44 in ** ii 40.00. qq “ •• ■■
Order quick. Also 230 second-hand Guns_t_aceuju Wheels.
Iug & Nic keling. Bicycles &
S KfWcj? able sleep; convir.ees effects thc cures $k«pttcal. here »3l2i^SSiLnc pF9 9
mart
s .iti..n. HABIC’HT .t TAYLOR. A r.STIX. I yx-A
Bryaafs Coll e ger 457 Mam St M ——.
HPIJ^ U HASH
H«™ Rem
S 6 &a££g£S 2 S&
i i _________—-- ’ 88
I A. a vt N. IT U...... .......Thirty-eight, .