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AGRICULTURAL.
TOPICS OF INTEREST BEIjATIVK
lO FARM AND GAKDfl.V.
i Fences.
Tn the new order of things fences are
rapidly disappearing from the land. This
much improves the appearance of city
and town streets, and is a change in the
right direction, and should bo regarded
as such.
Fences cannot be dispensed with upon
farms, however. They are needed as a
matter of protection against animals that
»ro allowed to feed along the wayside
without proper oversight on the part of
owners, and they are needed to keep
animals in one field without allowing
them to run into another.
It is important that a fence should be
continuous, and that when it is varied
by a gate or pair of bars that this device
be in perfect the order, and itself. serve the same
purpose as fence
In some parts of the farm, swampy or
woody the sections, a brush fence answers
requirements. utilized, Occasionally stones
may be but the fence best
adapted for general use is that made of
rails. The wire fence is often cheap and
useful, hut this can apply chiefly to th»t
which lacks the barbs. Of all instru
ments exceed of the torture barbed there can he nothing decided to
fence. It is a
fence, and serves to keep cattle in and
troublesome creatures out, and is a safe
guard also against tho all human by which intruders,but inno- it
is means many
cent creatures suffer. If it were only a
protection against thieves and meddle
excellent some persons, it might be regarded as an
system of fencing, but care
fully considered it seems impossible to
regard it else than a barbarity. It is a
common occuriencc for an animal to go
up to the fence to scratch his back, and
thus lacerate the flesh terribly. Alore
innocent creatures are hurt ignorantly
by coming in contact with these “bar
barous fences” than human marauders
are the injured. Fences arc still needed in
country, but simply as effective bar
riers, never as an instrument of torture.
— Miusac/nisellt Ploughman.
«, r - -
.Harvest ing tho Corn Crop.
While the products of the corn plant
are of more importance to the country at
largo than thoso of wheat, nothing like
the same anxiety is felt about it in ad
vance as the time of harvesting draws
near. Corn, which is native to this
country, has so many excellencies that
in enumerating them some are liable to
be overlooked. Among them, and not
the least, is the fact that tho gathering
of tho grain may be delayed or greatly
neglected with without very serious loss, while
the other cereals, especially with
wheat, no delay can be tolerated and,
when threatened with rust, neglect for a
couple of days may cause the loss of the
crop.
The plant also acommodate itself to
different soils and climates, growing
rapidly Northern in the shorter seasons of the
States and lengthening its time
of growth as well as tho length of its
stalks in the longer summers of the West
and South. It does not succumb easily
to unfavorable seasons, and with any
making thing like at proper least culture moderate rarely fails of
a crop. Be
sides this, it is but seldom seriously af
fected by disease or insect pests. Of
tho maladies that affect other cereals
there is one that occasionally appears in
this and deserves to bo guarded against
before it becomes more generally prev
alent. This is a fungus growth, or
kind of puffy excro eueo attached to the
stalk that seems akin to the smut in
wheat and other grains, and if left to
develop increase and mature is quite certain to
from year to year. To prevent
this these puffy balls should be removed
and completely destroyed a< soon as th y
appear, and seed from infected fields
should not be used. Whole tho seed is
at all suspected, it should ho washed in
a solution of lime and salt, or salt and
•opperas, strong without enough to destroy the
smut gem injuring the vitality
of the
The chief insects affectins the corn
the plant, chinch especially iii the Prairie States, is
of the Ohio bug, and from the July report
learned that it Experiment is Station it ia
ant in certain counties now injuriously abund
of that State. It
is also reported as destructive in Illinois
and other States. This is essentially a
dry-weather insect. The spring brood is
largely when developed in the wheat fields, aud
tho wheat harvest is over and the
supply the of food iu that quarter is exhausted
bugs, usually ouly partly grown
and without wings, migrate to adjacent
corn fields ou foot. Among the various
summer remedies suggested are plough
ing emulsion, the stubbie, trapping killing with kerosene
in furrows, etc.
Probably tecting the most effectual wav of pro
a corn field from invasion is to
cut five or six rows of corn from the side
exposed and plough half a dozen fur
rows, with the leaving one deep in tho eentto,
the perpendicular Into side of the furrow
next corn. this the migrating
insects will fall, where they can be cov
ered lightly with straw or any inflamma
ble material and cremated.
inauucr corn
varies greatly in different parts of the
country. In a few* sections the leaves
below the ears are first stripped off
while green, and tucked in small hand
fuls between the stalks of a hill to dry,
when they arc gathered aud bound into
larger bunches and stored away, making
• small amount of the best possible
corn fodder. Al'tov ward tho tops are
cut off just above the ears aud cured iu
small shocks, leaving the bare stalks
standing Where this to support and ripen the ears.
is well topping of is milk done before the
ear out the and the grain
has hardened it must to some extent rob
the latter of nourishment, of which at
this period a large proportion comes from
the sap in the top.
The most general and the better plan
is to cut the stalks later on a little above
the ground, and stand them up in shocks
to cure. In this way the whole of the
fodder is secured, aud the grain gets the
benefit of the sap already in the stalk,
besides absorbing additional matter from
the atmosphere From eighty to one
hundred h:11s may be put in a shock,
which should be tied around with coarse
twine two-thirds of the way from the
ground to prevent the loose stalks from
being ing blown stalks about by the wind. Thresh
the to gather the grain has
been advocated in some quarters, but as
yet has not becqrue at all common.
York World.
Farm and Carden Notes.
Don’t raise a poor calf.
Drain lagd and cultivate for moist
ure. *
Be sure that the water supply in the
pasture holds out.
The weeds must be kept down, or the
farm can not be successfully run.
If the farmer is to save his own seed,
he must save the earliest, largest and
best.
A good tomato should not only be
juicy. sound and solid, but also plump and
A farmer should supply himself with
the best farm tools and implements he
can obtain.
Ducks and geese should never have
access to a lawn. They pull the grass
up by the roots.
Corn endures drouth remarkably well,
but to do so, it is absolutely essential
that it be kept clean.
Pork made on clover is not finished only cheap
meat, but very delicious, if off
with grain in autumn.
Carflits should be thinned and weeded,
and left to stand two inches apart for the
stump rooted varieties.
Be certain that there is plenty of
water where the cows are turned out to
pasture. Clean, pure water is indis
pensable to a milch cow.
Paper Bottles.
considerable The paper-bottle industry has achieved
success in the West, and is
gradually United extending throughout the the
States. Foremost among ad
vantages of accruing is from this new adapta
tion paper the fact that the bottles
are unbreakable, while the cost at which
they can be placed on the market is
considerably lower than that of an article
of the same size in glass, stoneware or
tin. A great saving in the weight is
moreover effected, a desideratum of no
small amount where cost of carriage of
large numbers has to be taken into con
sideration, while the cost of packing is
reduced to a minimum, for breaking in
transit, which is a constant source of
loss with glass bottles, is obviously im
possible. ployed in the Special machinery is em
manufacture of paper bot
tles. thickness, A long having slip of paper of requisite
been forced into a tube
by is covered bending around a circular “mandrel,”
externally with an outerglaced
sheet, bearing any labels to be employed;
the tube is then cut into short lengths,
to the end of which are added tops,
bottoms and necks of paper—-or of
wood, if special strength is required—
nothing lining the further inside beyond pouting in and
with composition,
which, on settling, will effectually resist
the action of acids, spirits, inks, dyes,
etc. The utilization of paper is con
bare stantly enumeration receiving new. adaptations, would a
of which con
stitute a formidable list, while enough
has been said to demonstrate that the
latest development of this material iu the
bottle-making industry bids fair to hold
not an unimportant part in the varied
uses now obtained from paper .—Mail
and Exjfrrfii.
Gossip Him all Optician.
“You wish to know whether all my
customers optician are really near-sighted?” said
an to a New York Telegram re
porter, “Of course they are! With the
glass exception of dudes, who consider an eye
as essential to their general appear
ance as clothes, few wear glasses who
are not absolutely iu need of them.”
“Yet more men and women wear
glasses now than in former years?”
“Quite true, for Americans have
learned to use their eyes with discretion.
Taking into consideration our increase
of population, the proportion of near
sighted persons is not greater than
twenty children or thirty years ago. Formerly,
when complained that it hurt
their eyes to read and study, well-mean
ing but inexperienced mothers either
believed that they were trying to avoid
going to school, or supposed that they
had caught cold, and immediately ad
ministered a poultice or gave them
medicine. They forgot, no doubt, that
is
they “Neat-sighted older the eyes are elongated; and the as
grow eyes flatten
sight has been becomes stronger, if proper caro
taken in the use of suitable
glasses. of near-sighted It's singular that ilie ma ority blue
persons have light
or grayish blue eyes. Possibly the lighter
colors indicate greater visual weakness.
The Germans ate a blue-eyed race. You
would be surprised to seo the number of
German students in the universities who
wear spectacles. night Pondering over their
books at the constant strain of
tlieir eyes must have prematurely weak
ened them sooner than the dark ones,
dewing reading. also strains the eyes as much as
In fact, it is the case with any
fine work. Look at my clerks, for
instance. Most of them, who have been
in my employ a number of years, are
compelled to wear glasses.”
Postal Cliirogiaphy.
“How about tho difficulty of illegible
haudwritingsi” of Superintendent asked a Herald reporter
the of the Chicago
Post Office.
“Well, that is, generally speaking,
not as bad as might be expected, espe
cially in a cosmopolitan city like
national (. hieago, handwvitings. which cau boast of all sorts of
has skilled eyesight and Long practice dis
tinction our that gift of
so we but rarely have
difficulty In in deciphering any style of
writing. think remember my twenty only years’ experience
I I two or three oc
casions where I was unable to make the
writing Chiuese out. Judged by nationalities
the are by all odds the worst
penmen -that is, of our styleof writing.
You'd die laughing if you could see
sometimes the chirography some of those
almond-eyed gentlemen indulge m.
“The Italians come next as illegible
writers, and then some of the Scandina
vians and a few of the Germans, who
affect German script and get off some
very bold figures with the pen. The
Americans are, that goes without saying,
the plainest and most distinct writers.
But even among them there are s
good handwriting many who that affect such peculiarities
of puzzle us not a lit
tle. handed’ Especially ones—it what’s called the ‘back
may look pre’ty
enough, but and the characters all ruu into
each other make the effect of blurr
ing Ci-3 whole. It takes study to de
cipher have this to style twist of the writing, letter and you of
ten and turn it
sideways oItL” apd upside down to get «uy
sense — ^ _________
A BANK BUBGLAR’S BOLJ^UCK.
In theGnise of a Pinkerton Detect
ive He Kidnaps a Bank Cashier
Iowa City, Ia-— One of the most dar
ing exploits of a ganfi of burglars which
narrowly light escaped success has just previous come
to here. For a few days
to the bold attempt to rob the Bank of
Wellman, a town near this city, four
suspicious persons were seen about the
streets, but it was not dreamed that they has
had their eyes on the bank, which
but recently been started. The cashier
is a young man twenty-three years of age,
who carries the keys to the bank, and
with the President of tho institution is
the only person who knows the combina
tion of the valuta. A few nights ago
while Air. Aloore, the cashier, was
spending the evening with his prospect- house
ive bride, a carriage drove up the He
and a stranger knocked at the door.
demandecLwith an air of authority to see
young Aloore, aud taking him to the
buggy grasped him by the shoulder aud
said: “You are my prisoner.”
The cashier was much astonished, but
he was informed that he was a forger
and that the stranger was a Pinkerton
detective, and the best thing that could
be done was for tho cashier to go along
with him. Said the alleged detective :
“If you want to go to the bank to get
any money or papers that you need I
will go with you, but I am in a great
hurry. the ” Aloore said he would not go to
bank, but that he had a friend that
he would like to see to borrow some
money from if he had to be taken away.
A this point a country doctor came up,
and, being a friend of Aloore, asked to
see tho papers on which the latter had
been arrested. The bogus detective
said : “I am a Pinkerton man and I
don’t have to show my papers.”
Then Aloore was taken to the friend
he wanted to see, who proved to be the
President of the bank, Air. Nicholas,
who wanted to know why Moore was ar
rested, and who finally said that it
would be best for Aloore to go with the
officer. Tho pretended detective started
out to take his prisoner to Iowa City.
The arrest aroused some half dozen peo
ple in the small town, and the detective
seemed in a hurry to get off. Finally he
started and when a little way from the
village drink he gave Moore something to
from a bottle. In a few minutes
he was taken violently ill. lie is still
sick from the influence of the drug that
was When undoubtedly Iowa administered to him.
told Moore he City was reached the man
was sorry, but he made a
mistake. He had found a telegram at
the livery barn imforruing him that a
mistake had been made, and that he was
the wrong Aloore. The men then
pretended separated, Moore detective going home and the
North. taking a train
From investigations made with
in the last few days it is pretty certain
that Moore was in tho custody of a burg
lar. It is believed that had the bogus
detective succeeded iu getting his man
off without arousing the President of the
bank and so many other citizens he
would have taken him to the bank and
forced him to tell the rest of the gang
the combinations of the vaults which
then held over $25,000.
YELLOW FEY EE.
Prevention Better Than Cure.
The following statement speaks for itself:
“This certifies that I was, with my family,
a resident of New Orleans during the terrible
Yellow Fever epidemic which visited that
city in 1878. We wore strangers there, and
unacclimated, but having previously used
Ayer’s Ague Cure for malarial disorders, I
fully believed it would prove a preventive of
the scourge. I took the Ague Cure myself,
and had my little girls take it daily,
but I could not persuade my husband to use
it. He fell sick of the fever and died, but
my children and I were not attacked. Our
exemption from siekuess at this time was
considered miraculous, but I believe it was
Ayer's Ague Cure, and feci sure that we owe
to this medicine the fact that we survived
the epidemic.”—Mrs. L. E. Osborn, Prescott,
Ark.
Measured.
One of the most valuable lessons to be
learned, in any course of education, is
that of exact conformity to rule, The
half educated person is apt to be a slov
enly one; he acts on the supposition that
work enough.” imperfectly done will “do well
A laborer in a ship yard was one day
given a two-foot rule, to measure a piece
of iron plate. Not being accustomed to
the use of the rule, he returned it after
wasting “Well, a good Alike,” deal of time.
asked his superior,
officer, 1 » “what is the size of the plate?”
“Well, ” replied Mike, with a smile
which accompanies duty performed,
“it’s the length of your rule and two
thumbs over, with this piece of brick,
and the breadth of my hand and arm,
from here to there, bar a finger.”
They Look Alike.
The members of the Chinese legation
at Washington try very hard to make
themselves popular in society. They of
ten make handsome presents, rare jewel
ry, quaintances. perhaps, or They costly silk—to casual assiduous ac
are very
to paying calls. They start out together
and go from house to house, leaving
their cards and photographs. They seem
to think that their names will not be
recognized, their so they leave their pictures,
to establish respective individuali
ties. But to most Washingtonians the
photographs all look alike.
Excellent Bracers.
The increase, says a New York paper,
in the consumption of milk by business
and professional men of late years, has
been marked. Where once the potent
cocktail was considered essential as a
concomitant of a day’s work, in many
cases a glass of milk is now preferred.
To men of sedentary habits, whose
brains are at fever heat a good part of
the time, milk is one of the best “bra
cers” in tho world. It is easily digested
and is a great waste-repairer. Its grow
sign. ing popularity in that city is a promising
Thf.v are heroes, indeed, these teleg
raphers at Jacksonville, Fla., who. night
and day, in the midst of the pestilence,
tell the story of sickness aud death.—
Charleston. S. C, Kem.
Biting the Finger Kails.
Dr. Jerome Tuthill, of Chicago, Ill., in
the Medical Record, Bays: A novel acci
dent, resulting from a habit of very
common brought prevalance to among notice nervous recently. peo
ple, was lady presented my herself at my
A young irrita
office complaining of a constant
tion in her throat. Two weeks pre
viously she had been taken with a severe
“sore throat,” which was treated by a
neighboring physician. Under his care,
she says, the inflammation quickly sub
sided, but there still remained a sensa
tion of irritation. Examination revealed
a small fleshy-Iooking object, about the
size of a kernal of wheat, adherent to
the tissues posterior to the left tonsil, by
one end. The other parts of the throat
were normal. The little mass could not
be detached by a cotton-covered probe, easily
but by the use of forceps it was
removed, and on examination which proved had be- to
be a piece of finger nail, deposit. A
come covered by a cheesy
broken piece of the nail was also re
removed from under the mucous mem
brane at the same spot by a sharp-point- confessed
ed probe. The patient then
to the habit of biting her finger nails,
and, moreover, could remember that a
day or two previous to the onset of her
throat trouble a piece of nail which she
had bitten off had become lost in her
mouth, but after it had caused a fit of
coughing, she had forgotten about it un
till reminded by my discovery.
There arc on exhibition in the rooms
of the State mining bureau at San Fran
cisco, four “desiccated human bodies”
that were found by Signor S. Alarghieri
in a sealed cavern at an elevation of 4,
000 feet on the eastern side of the Sierra
Madre Mountains in Mexico.
Their Only Medicine Chest.
Dberlodos, Montana, Dec. 16, 1885.
I have been using Brandheth’s Pills for
the last thirteen years, and though I have had
nine children, I have never had a doctor in the
house, except three time., when we had an epi
demic of scarlet fever,which we soon banished
by a vigorous use of Brandreth’s Pills. I
have used them for myBelf.two or three anight
for a month, for liver complaint, dyspepsia,
and constipation. In diarrhoea, cramps, wind
colio, indigestion, one or two Brandreth’s
Pills fixed the children at once. A box of
Pills is all the medicine cheat we require in the
house. We us* them for rheumatism, colds,
catarrh, biliousness, and impure blood. They
never have failed to cure all the above com
plaints In a very few days.
William W. B. Miller.
The Prince of Wales is said to be a first-class
banjo player.
_
A General Tie-up
Of all the means of public conveyance in a
large city, even for a few hours,during a strike
of the employes, and industry means a general time paralyzing being, and
of trade for tne
is attended with an enormous aggregate loss to
the community. How much more serious to
the individual is the general tie-up of his sys
tem, known as constipation, and due to the
strike of the most important better organs If for more long
prudent neglected, treatment torpid and sluggish care. liver will too
a or and pro- dis
duce serious forms of kidney liver
eases, malarial Pleasant trouble Purgative and chronic Pellets dyspepsia.
Dr. Pierce’s are a
preventive and cure of these disorders. They
are prompt, positively sure and effective, pleasant to
take, and harmless.
The labor press continues to agitate for the
rule.
Warner’s Log Cabin Remedies—old fash
ioned, simple compounds, used in the days of
our hardy reliable.” forefathers, They comprise are “old "Sarsapari timers’ la,” but
“old Remedy,” a
“Hops and Buchu “Cough and Con
sumption for External Remedy,” and Internal “Hair Tonic,” Use, “Plasters,” “Extract,”
“Rose Cream,” for by Catarrh, and “Liver & Co., Pills.”
They prietors are of put Warner’s up H. Safe H. Remedies, Warner and pro
of those prom- great
ise preparations. to equal the All standard druggists value keep them.
All dramatic artists’, when off the stage in
Russia, m ust wear a uniform.
_
Children Starving to Death
On account of their inability to digest food,
will find a most marvellous food and remedy
in Scott’S Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil
with Hj-pophosphites. Very palatable and
easily digested. Dr. S. W. Cohen, of Waco,
Texas, Infantile says: “I have used your Emulsion in
only wasting with good results. It not
restores wasted tissues.but gives strength
and increases the appetite. I am glad to use
such a reli able at tide.”
_
President Diaz, of Mexico, recommends a
new extrad ition treaty with the Uni ted States.
Woman’s Work.
There is no end to the tasks which daily con
front the good housewife. To be a successful
housekeeper, the first requisite is good health.
How cau a woman contend against the trials
and worries of housekeeping it she De suffering
from those distressing irregularities, ailments
and weaknesses peculiar to her sex? Dr.
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is a specific for
these disorders. The only remedy, sold by
manufacturers. druggists, under a Satisfaction positive guarantee from the
refunded. guaranteed See in
every guarantee case, or bottle money printed
on wrapper.
Life is too short to be spent in nursing ani
m >sity or re gister in g wrong.
The Coming Comet.
It is fancied by a gratefill patron that the
next comet will appear in the form of a huge
bottle, having “Golden Medical Discovery’' in
scribed uppn it in bold characters. Whether
this conceit and high compliment will be veri
fied, remains to be seen, out Dr. Pierce will
continue to send forth that wonderful vege
table compound, and potent eradicator of dis
ease. It has no equal m medicinal and health
giving to properties, for imparting vigor and tone
jTg/*ver and kidneys,m purifying the blood,
and through it cleansing and renewing the
whole system. For scrofulous humors, and
stages, consumption, it positive or _ lung scrofula, in its early
is a specific. Druggists.
Miss MacTavish, of Va., will marry the Duke
of Norfolk, the premier duke of Eng land.
Bradfleld’s Female Regulator will cure all
irregularities or derangements peculiar to
woman. Those suffering should us e it.
If afflicted with c ore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp
son Eye'water. Druggists sell at 25c. per bottle.
Wabner’sLog Cabin
Remedies. — “Sarsapa
rilla, ”—‘ ‘Cough andCon
sumption Remedy,” —
“Extra “Hops and Buchu,” —
_____Tonic, £ c t,”—“H air
’’-“Liver Pills,
4 ‘Plasters, ” (Porous-Electrical >,—' ‘Rose
Cream,” for Catarrh. They are, like
Warner’s “Tippecanoe,” the simple, ef
fective remedies of the old Log Cabin
days.
1
6 il.
iHsi
PINE-NEEDLE OIL.
f n'ng^Ti'ou™ ^ he ^?eedl*a of the^Pine JTree, enres
Atlanta, Ga.
W Humane Remedy Co., Lat'ateit'e, Ind.
PISOS CURE FOR CONSUMPTION
Los Cabin Success.
What ails the young men?
Robert Garrett's father left him a fortune
of twenty millions. He was from childhood
reared in luxury; he received a splendid
education with an especial training into a
thorough knowledge of railroad management
and was expected to succeed his father as a
railroad king. after the responsibili
Within three years
ties which his father’s death threw upon him
were assumed, he is reported a broken down
man, with mind and health permanently
shattered. Law is another left
George millions of who young is man reported
with money,
among the “wrecks.” His father, bred a
stone mason, was of gigantic size and strength,
with commensurate brain power, so he be
came a i great contractor, then a railroad
king an dleft half a dozen millions for his
son to dissipate. The young man is a suc
cess as a dissipator. of
The founders both of these great estates
were born in the most humble walks of life,
simple grew strong, living and mentally honest labor and physically, and developed by
into financial giants. Their sons were reared
in the lap pigmies. of luxury and developed into in
tellectual
The great men of our country have not, as
a rule, come but from from the the elegant Cabins mansions of
the cities, Log of the
rural dom from districts. dissipation Simple and ways of living, pleas- free
for enervating
ures, which simple remedies disease, the effective de
and leave no poison in system,
velop brawny, recognize brainy men, who compel the
world to tbeir strength and power.
The wholesome, old-fashioned Log Cabin
remedies are the safest and surest for family
use. Our grandmothers knew how to pre
pare the teas and syrups of roots, herbs and
balsams which drive disease out fit the sys
tem by natural methods and leave no after
ill-effects. The most potent of these old
lime remedies were, after long and searching
investigation, secured by H. H. Warner, of
safe cure fame, and are now put out for the
"healing of the nations” in the Warner’s Log
Cabin remedies.
Regulate the regulator with Warner’s Log
Cabi sarsaparilla, strength, and mental with pure and bodily blood
giving health,
vigor, you may gigantic hope financial to cope problems successfully of
with the most
the age, without wrecking health and man
hood.
A Pleasing Laxative
Whoever has taken Hamburg Figs will never
take any other kind of laxative medicine. in They their
are pleasant to the taste, and are sure
action, a few doses curing the most obstinate
case of constipation or torpidity of the liver. 25
cents. Dose one Fig. Mack Drug Co., N.Y.
Bronchitis is cured by frequent small doses
of Piso’s Cure for Consumpnon.
If You Are Sick
With Headache, Neuralgia, Eh umatism Dyspep
sia, Biliousness, Blood Humors, Kidney Disease,
Constipation, Female Troubles, Fever and Ague,
Sleeplessness, Partial Paralysis, or Nervous Pros
tration, use Paine’s Celery Compound and be
cured. In each of these the cause is mental or
physical c crwork, anxiety, exposure or malaria,
the effect of which is to weaken the nervous sys
tem, resulting in pne of these diseases. Remove
the cause with that great Nerve Tonic, and the
result will disappear.
Paine’s Celery Compound
Jas. L. Bowen, Springfield, Mass., writes :—
"Paine’s Celery Compound cannot be excelled as
a Nerve Tonic. In my case a single bottle
wrought disappeared, a great and change. My nervousness entirely
with it the resulting affection
of the stomach, heart and liver, and the whole
tone I tell of the friends, system if sick was wonderfully 1 have been, invigorated. Paine's
mv as
Celery Compound
Will Cure You!
Sold by druggists. J1; Bix for 85. Prepared only
by Wel i.s, Richardson & Co., Burlington, Vt.
For the Aged, Nervous, Debilitated.
(§)
Warranted to color more goods than any other and
dyes durable ever colors. made, and Ask to for give the more brilliant
other. Diamond, and take
no
A Dress Dyed IO FOR
A Coat Colored
Garments Renewed CENTS.
A Child can use them!
Unequalled for all Fancy and Art Work.
WELLS, At druggist|gtnd RICHARDSON Merchants. Dye Book free. Vt
& CO., Props., Burlington,
Grasses-South.
—SEND TO THE—
ATLANTA SEED CO * t
S3 Peachtree Sf., - ATLANTA, GA.
For price list Grasses, * Clovers, For Georgia South." Rye. Barley,
Etc,, end our circular, ‘Grasses the
IW’Ment.ion this paper,
_
S3 i jisyi ■a Ely’s WILL Price Cream 50 CURE Cents, Balm,
ifp £ATARRU
V-iVQ* 1 Apply Balm into each nostril.
USA, ELY BRQ3., 66 Warren St., N. Y,
,
RH*SpgSHOT GUH T- -w
R
fleulerhosn^U.VcTifi Insist« fo*u* SeilTdcJn
lOO-Page Catalogue of Gun?. Riflet, Revolvers, ttmpsfor Police Illustrate*
_F. LOVELL ARMS GO., K;:auf*rs, Goods,
lloiton, Mass.
gists FUESlf&KSS or grocers, or mailed, postage paid, receipt
of 5 on
cents. T. K. HAWLEY, Manufac
turer, St Beekmao Street, New York.
M 47% 1 3k Full Tb of book thrilling adventures, have been
■ IKS ■ n ■ I b m3 kw looking e for, you but did not
■ COWBOY.SHfeS wr —A know where to get. Nearly
Oval Box, 34; round, 14 PHI,.
m I Llvt at anything ftt home else and in make the more world. money Either working rex. Costly for tu outfit than
TUI. Terms free. Address, True A Co., Augusta, Maine.
QOLQilA^O^or Consumptives and Asthm&t
FI and cess. treated business. or guaranteed FISTULA treated. Dr. Whitehall caustic. R. a’I No G. by Rectal No Reference loss St,, JACKSON, A a in knife, radical painless of Atlanta, every time Disease ligature rirea. cvrs from pro* case Ga. 42^ 8
T:.e mail who haj invested from three MS. We offer the man who wants service
ll at Sf. ms 6 first had 1? honr v* Kubter j experience Coat ’ In ■ . m (not him etvle) dry in a the garment hardest that etorm. will Jeep It U
a hardly etorm better finds to hie sorrow that it is IM ■■ luT f ■ called TOWElt'S FISH BRAND
a protection than a mos- *• SLICKER," a name familiar to every
quito netting, not only feels chagrined ■ ® — ■ Cow-boy all over the land. With them
fee. at being so hadiy taken In, but a!«o M j§BM IBBBI the only perfect Wind and Waterproof
e if he do es n ot look exa ct ly like fin Bml Coat is “Tower's Fish Brand Slicker.
Ask for the “ FISH t BRAND ” Slicks I ■ &■ I V and take no other. If yonr storekeeper
[ T .v.!w BH ,, V s 3 1 f ° rd8 ’ cr 'P t T ® catalogue. A, 3. Tower. 20 Simmons St.,"Boston.Mass
.T. .T..T..T. T » ’ .-
DR. SCHENCK’S
Pulmonic §yrup
and all affections of lungs '^ 01
BECAUSE It ripens and loosens the tubercle,
Rids the Lungs i
of purulent matter >
Cleans and heals the sore
Makes blood spots
new and helps cir^
(Helps /Prevents the other return deposits of flesh of tubercle spirit'
\Cures where and
other remedies fail.
0 tr” tise'on 1 the^Lu'n
and admirable
Jssr* tion, and will Msasajtt, Jd give fde« ,nfori »»- I
Vital you “ ft**. .a
organs f l h
never had before. Sent free. 1
DR. SCHENCK’S MEDICINESt
PURELY VEGETABLE. »
PULMONIC SYRUP, 4 .
SEAWEED TONIC AND
MANDRAKE PiLLs
directions with each pad!^. am***
I
: --XT
W — n
A. P. STJBWART & C 0 „
69 Whitehall Street,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Bso
in time. Sold by druggists.
I believe Piso’s Cure
for Consumption saved
mv life.—A. H. Doxvf.ll,
Editor Enquirer, Eden
ton, N. C., April 23, 1887,
PISO
The best Cough Medi
cine is Piso’s Cuke fob
Consumftion. Children
take it without objection.
By all druggists. 25c.
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes druggists. good, use
in time. Sold by
MEMORY MARVELOUS
DISCOVERY.
Any book learned In one reading.
Mind wandering cured.
Hpea!<ing without artificial uotes.
Wholly unlike systems. Court.
Piracy condemned correspondence by Supreme classes.
Orest Inducements to of Win. AH*®'
Prospectus, with opinions Dr. Mind disease*,
mond, the eenleaf world-famed Specialist the in great Psychol*
1> anlol ii r Tliotn r sou*
an< I \ a £o t 0 New York
PROF. ISE'i'T£, Z!7 Fifth Ave.,
WEBSTER
WONABMCtti itERABY
'DICTIONAfhM IN
; ITSELF J§
3000 more Words and nearly 3000 rr.ore Illus
trations than any other American Dictionary.
An Invaluable Companion Fireside.
in every School and at every
Sold by all Booksellers. Illustrated Pamphlet
sent free.
G. ?- C. MEBRTAM A CO.. Puh’rs.SnringfieltL-Jjg:
$160 FARMERS A ’*“"**• ***"■
CIrcu'l ar*S SAW ■ mill. I 1L**—-i.j h
h^v"! fba
With Universal
Log- Beam Recti- TB&&3&
linear Bimnlta
neons Set Ec-^gfeggfsls
and Double f[ffrpnItiffi |T|\ C\ IFFP^
centric Friction P
Feed. Manufac
SALEM^ROS WOHKS,
m JONES
■ - vV/i and Beam Bo* *« r
fare Be*m
* msiGHAMTON. Ij; *’
mm .«»» pY^-Y o riES
g g OTTO, factory pries ♦60.00, our prlc.
48 iu.’ •• ■> •• WOO’, “ •« 80.00. 33.W
46 in. “ « “ 45.00, “ ••
44 I". “ " “ 40.00, " «« 27.0(1
Order quick. Also250 second-hand Wheels. , Kep»
log A Nickeling. Bicycles A Gnns taken 1.
{mediate relief in the worst c*we«.insures oomfon*
able eleeo; effects cores where a! otnernx
trial^jnrir.Cb* th* watt skeptical.
pgpssgagi LOWMENT SOCIETY, Bo x 846, Minnexpojj*3??L
yoiiEa««gS
C R ^rno a t & !
(ill Brewater Safety BatoHolderCo..HoU»y. M jgl
A. N. U Forty, ’8*