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AGRICULTURAL.
TOPICS OP INTEREST RELATIVE
TO FARM AND GARDEN.
Fall Chicks.
Now is the time to set broody hens in
order to get * supply of pullets for early
spriug begin laying. in February Pullets hatched and March,and now will
laying
the first to begin will want to sit by the
last of March. In sitting hens in hoi
weather it is best to make a nest on the
ground, or if this is not practicable, line
a box with sod, dirt sid.e up._ Sprinkle
with water containing- a solution of car
bolic acid. Make the nest on top and
sprinkle haye with sulphur, and you need
no fear of lice. If yoibhave any
newly-hatched chicks that f-eem droopy,
and you have not taken the above pre
cautions against lice, examine their
heads at once for the so called butcher
lice. To destroy them anoint their
heads with your finger dipped in lard.
Repeat body the third day,and tre.it the breast,
and wings of the' mother hen to a
like process .—New York Hun.
A Sanitary Hint.
The cellar demands attention now.
The great source of diseases is a damp,
filthy cellar. It will pay for tho tirno
tequiied fruit to clean it out. Tho decayed
and vegetables, the sprouting po
tatoes, beets, etc., the mouldy boards
and kegs, the refuse of celery; plants
that have passed the season there should
be removed, and the cellar swept and
cleaned, whitewashed, if possible, but
nt least cleaned of cobwebs and mould.
Tho banking that has protected the
house collects moisture now, and is
harmlui to as great a degreo as once it
was hea lhful. Let in the pure air and
allow all loul ga’-es toescape, thus much
of the unpleasant, “weary ieeling” may
be avoided, if not a severe and possibly
fatal diease escaped. There is no excuse
because so much has to be||done in a short
time now. This is a most important
work and cannot a.LTord to wait.— Mas
iaeltuxeU < 1 t lo t.uj ^, (ji t
Experimental Manurin'-.
Any work ol experimenting in the
growth of crops by different method* Uf
manuring or culture should be based
upon equal condition*. Thus, if a far
mer were to try the results of various
moles of manuring and fertilizing he
should select or make a piece of soil that
would not grow any crop at ail, or such
« crop over the whole ground that would
measure The latter precisely the same in every part.
is very rarely to be found, but
a wornout piece of land may easily be
is procured to be that will not grow corn—if corn
J he grown as a test crop—at all.
writer* in his experiments in grow
ing corn consecutively for several years
by the use of the special corn mauure,
and in growing mangels by another arti*
tlcia fertilizer, chose a piece of land upon
which the previous year the largest corn
stalk was only seven inches high, and the
best mangel weighed only two ounces.
Such soil as this will then show pre
cisely what the manure will do, and will
give rosults as uoar certainty as may be.
J lie present year a corn crop grown to
test varieties for ensilage on a piece of
new land without manuring is so uneven
and spotty that the corn plants average
hi Such height from ten inches to seven feet.
a piece of soil is clearly unlit for
experimenting on, and will be until it is
worn down to »n even quality .—Nw
York Times .
Paris Green—Its ITse.
The use of Paris green in orchards fof
the destruction of insects which injure
fruit- and foliage has been discussed
quite freely at several of the agricultural
conventions the past few months, Paris
green seems to bo coming into use in
some sections as much in tlie orchard as
n the potato field. Some whohaveap
plied u wuhout due caution have killed
tne loliagc and occasionally a cow or
bucli poisons as Paris green
should not be loft around carelessly ex
posed to animals or children who are
not informed of it* nature.
bourn persons are doubtless unneces
sarily fearful of having it applied in the
garden or field. There are those who
have attempted to discard from their
tables all potatoes which have been pro
tected by the use of poison, but the green
is now used so universally on all farms
where potatoes are grown and without
the least injury to the tubers that the
fear is pretty well overcome. It has been
found that for potatoes a mixture of
pure Paris green and plaster at tho rate
of one pound of tho former to 200 or 300
pomids tlit* proportion of plaster of is more effective than If!
ii the green is greater.
greeu fs put on iu too large propor
tion the insects will reject leaves upon
Which it lies; while if the green is ex
tended three hundred times the leaves
will be eaten more readily and thus more
of the poison will be taken, though in
very small doses. But if eaten in however
small quantity the effect seems fatal. In
spraying fruit trees with Paris green
water, a Connecticut man applied it
strong tho enough to destroy the insects on
the foliage, yet his horse feeding upon
grass underneuth tho trees was not
poisoned.
. little that cattle might
cat potato vines which had been poisoned
eneu gh to destroy th e beetle without be
ing themselves poisoned. Iso, too, pota
toes in gnrdeus may have the green ap
plied on a windy day, and peas and
beans growing near get slight doses with
out bles causing be personreating these vegeta
to to such poisoned, yet it is hardly safe
utter statement* because of tl>«
danger that some one will act too ven
turesome or foolhardy in its use. Poisons
of this nature, like lire, arc good friends,
but by negligence may become among
our greatest foes .—New England Farmer,
Farm and Garden Notes.
Don’t neglect the weeds.
No soil produces useful erof s when
prematutely saturated with water.
The most persistent vigilance is re
quired to eradicate the cockle burr.
As a remedy for white specks in the
butter try stirring the cream every morn
ing before churning.
handling •Young colts are fond of petting. Kind
makes them gentle and more
easy to manage later on.
Do not expect your horse to be equal
ly good at everything. The horse, like
the man, must be adapted to his work.
The puritv and wholesomeness of the
milk the depends drank, largely upon the quality
of water as well as upon the
quality of the food eaten.
WORDS OF WISDOM.
Act well at the moment.
Pleasure is the reward of moderation.
shorn. Many go out for wool and return
We open the hearts of others when
we open our own.
If you desire to be crowned, strive
manfully, bear patiently.
A character that will not defend itself
is rarely worth defending.
What we are at home is a pretty sure
test of what we really are.
The greatest evidence of demoraliza
tion is the respect paid to wealth.
There are no greater prudes than those
■women who have some secret to hide.
The reproaches of enemies should
from quicken us to duty, and not keep us
it.
He needs no other rosary whose thread
of life is strung with beads of love and
thought.
Labor makes known the true worth of
a man, as fire brings the perfume out of
incense.
The first sure symptom of a mind in
health is rest at heart and pleasure felt
at home.
Ewl habits are webs which are too
light to be noticed until they are too
strong to be broken.
Great ideas travel slowly, and for a
time noiselessly, as the gods whose feet
were shod with wool.
T he world knows no victory to be
compared and with failings. the victory over our own
passions
It is more manly to fail in a hundred
enterprises those than to sit down and grum
bleat who are trying.
A Musical Dee&nter.
A cut glass decanter with a musical
box concealed in the bottom is the latest
novelty in the l<“ e of fancy articles with
musical, attachments. The decanters
«rc tinted in a variety of delicate colors,
Ivhich eeh e to conceal the false bottom,
Under which the mechanism is placed.
Clear glass bottles are also made, and
when partly filled with wine or a colored
liquid fectually. conceal the works still more ef
The musical box is wound by
means of a button under the bottom;
and plays only when the decanter is
placed on the table.
Musical plates are made in a similar
manner, but the mechanism in them dobs
not but play when the plate is on the table,
wheft it is lifted to be passed around.
A concealed spring underneath starts
and stops the works. The plates and
decanters cost $7.50 each.
11 he most elegant fancy article that
emits musical sounds is a gold snuff bo •,
It is elegantly wrought, and is man el
lous in its working. Pressure upon a
small disc causes a circular lid about thte
?.*“ a Rlve r dollar to fly open, and a
little , bird . pops into view. The feathered
songster warbles in exact imitation of a
canary, head and dancing bdl about and moving its
the while, and as it utters
the last note it disappears from view,
and the 1 id closes with a snap. On the
other side of the box a larger lid opens
lnto a receptacle for snuff. These trilies
cost from $100 upward, ac ording to the
amount of ornamental work and jewel
ing that is done upon them. Like all
of the most expensive musical boxes,
? ro m,l de in Switzerland .—New
i or-- Journal.
Kou,,. Wrought ll-on C6 »,„ s
.
The process some time since announced
of rolling out chains of wrought iron
from the solid bar has, with certain im
provements, been siiccessfully resorted to
the principle of forming the rollers
hnu the process of rolling out a chain
being in this ea<e similar in some re
spects to the method employed for cast
ing the links and having them come out
latter together operation in a chain the from a mold. In the
flask is made to part
equally cd while iu the four ways, and the chain mold
links arc separated so as to
divide the sjia 'e equally between them,
giving as little clearness as possible,
which will not change their appearance
pcrceptibly—the chain flask is divided, the
is removed, and one is cast in the
mold. Similarly, a piece of chain is
swedged out of a bar of iron in an analo
gous die manner Thus, by means of four converg
lng j . in producing a continu
ous chain in this way, the dies are trade
continuous by having them formed on
the circumference of four rollers arranged
with dies distributed in equal divisions,
Rhd the rollers driven by gear wheels, so
that the four parts of a link will meet
accurately in place; proper clearauce is
giyen terinl to to tile leave dies, the so matrix as to allow freely the taa
as the
roller revolves. As the blank is carried
forward between the rollers, the dies
partially right press or swedge out the links
at angles to each other, breaking
the fin or feather edge that is left on the
inside of the link .;—Mining and Scientific
Press.
Tile “ Topsy-turvy ” Railway.
The latest amusement at Brussels is
riding on “Lo Chemin de Fer de
1’Armour,” or the “Topsy-turvy” rail
way. It consists of an enormous barrel
opened at the end, and grooved so as to
run upon a set of rails which slope in the
centre. On each sale of the barrel is a
seat, and on each seat three passengers
sit, being strapped round the waist, and
their having bauds their feet in straps, while with
barrel they hold on to the seats.
The is set in motion, and goes
down the incline and up the other side,
with passengers it. The turning journey round is and round
a short one, the
barrel rolling and completely over only four
times, then stopping with its pas
sengers is seated centimes. right side up again The
fare “0 Many women ride
in it, their skirts fastened by a strap at
the ankle .—New York Sun.
Why Colonels Are Nnmerons.
Bill Arp explains, in a recent letter to
the Atlanta Constitution, that in old time
militia musters “the Governor was the
Commander-in-Chief, be but as he could
not reviewed personally present, the militia
had were aid-de by proxy. Every county
an camp with the rank of
Colonel. He held his rank and title as
loug he as the Governor held his office, and
talk was for expected him to holler for him and
and boom him, and, it
necessary, he must fight for him on a
sui’.ablo occasion. If the Governor failed
of re-election, those Colonels had to re
tire too, and a new set were appointed,
but the old set never lost their title, and
so the State in course of time got * pretty r s
full of Coionais.”
feathered Harbingers of Storms.
The gawOike note of the great tit
mouse is said to foretell rain; that o!
the blue-tit; cold. .
Various proverbs would seem to indi
cate that the cry of the owl, if heard in
bad weather, foretells a change.
Herons, says an old author, flying doubtful up
and down in the evening as if
where to rest, “presage some evil ap
proaching weather”—a legend as old as
Virgil. dwellers the country
In Germany in
lack faith in the skylark as announcing
fine weather, but when the lark and the
cuckoo sing together they know sum
mer has come. '
In Hampshire swans are believed to
be hatched in thunderstorms, and it is
said that those on the Thames have an
instinctive preseience of floods. Before
heavy rains they raise their nests. much store
In the south of France so
is set by the wisdom of the magpie, that
if it builds its nest on the summit of a
tree the country folk expect a season of
calm, but if lower down, winds and
tempests are sure to follow.
The abhorrence in which mariners hold
the swallow-like storm petrel is well
known. Its appearance is believed to
denote wild weather. This little bird is
the Mother Carey's chicken of sailors,
and is also eaiied storm finch and water
witch.
Concerning gulls in general, Children
who lire by the sea say: “Beagull, sea
gull, weather sit while on the sand; it’s never good
you're on the land;” and
fisher folk know that when the sea
mews fly out early and far to seaward
fair weather may be expected.
When rooks fly high and seem to imi
tate birds of prey by soaring, swooping,
and falling, it is almost certain sign of
coming storm. Staying in the vicinity
of the rookery, returning at midday, or
coming to roost in groups are also said
to be omens to the like effects.
The constant iteration of the green
woodpecker’s it the cry before the storm has
given and rain fowl. names StormcocR of rain bird, rain pie,
ih a provin
cial name shared by this bird and the
missel thrush, the latter often singing
bird through gales applied of wind and rain. Storm
is also to the fieldfare.
To Scotch shepherds the drumming of
the snipe indicates dry weather and frost
at night; and Gilbert White remarks
that woodcocks have been observed to be
remarkably while, listless against snowy, another foul
weather, according to
author, their early arrival and continued
abode “ foretells a liberal harvest.”—
Chicago News.
The Pantshen Lama.
The selection of the Pantshen lama,
whose headquarters are at the monastery
of Krashis Lunpo in Further Thibet, and
who has Shared the bverlordship of
Thibet with the Dalai lama since the
fifteenth century, took place at Lhassa,
recently. The ceremony is, perhaps, the
strangest revival in the ritual of any
church. It was an old idea with the
northern Buddhists that distinguished
members of their order were incarnations
of divine beings, who, while continuing
to live in heaven, had the power to as
is aume an earthly held existence. This belief
still regarding the pontiff of
Gedun Dubpa and Krashis Lunpo, the
one being looked on as the incarnation
of the third person in the Trin ty, of
which the great teacher is the head, and
the other that of the sec yd .person in
“r,r- portwfaiSf’ S"
shen lama did some time ago, the
other has to set to work and discover
wherein the celestial spirit has embodied
himself anew. The first step is to get
the names of all the male children born
just after the death of the deceased lama,
and to select three from these, one of
which, cast by lot, is the name of the new
incarnation. About the beginning of
the year the ( hinese Resident at Lhassa
was informed that three “young boys of
remarkable had found, intelligence and strangeness”
been and after some time
spent in communicating brought with Pekin, the
youngsters were to Lhassa and
preparations made for the grand cere
mony. All flic abbots of the great mon
asteries were present to supervise the
week of prayer; the three children were
received by the Resident and the Thibe
tan authorities “in order that their in
tclligence and diffeience from other per
sons might be tested,” and finally on an
auspicious of day the boys a golden having vase containing
the fate been brought
in and which placed stands in front the of the emperor s
image, in hall at Gedun
Dubpa, the lot was drawn and the elect
of the three nailed as Amitabba incar
sate, the ! antshenRinpotshe, “Glorious
Teacher,” henceforth to rule over half
Thibet,
Why Do Bees Work In the Dark?
A lifetime might be spent in inves
tigating the mysteries hidden in a bee
hive, and still half The of the secrets would
be undiscovered. formation of the
cell has long been a problem fer the
mathematician, while the changes which
the honey undergoes, the offer at least an
aqual interest to chemist. Every
one knows what honey is fresh from the
comb is like. It a clear, yellow syrup
without a trace of sugar in 1 , it. Vpon
straining, however, it gradually assumes
a crystalline appearance—it candies, as
the saying is, and ultimately becomes a
solid mass of sugar. It has not been
suspected photographic that this change is due to a
which action, that the same agent
determines the formation of
camphor the and iodine honey crystals in a bottle,
causes syrup to assume a crys
talline form. This, however, is tne case.
M. Schiebler, an eminent chemist, has
enclosed honey in stoppered flasks, some
of which he has kept in perfeet dark
ness, while otheis have been exposed to
the light. The invariable result has
been that the sunned portion rapidly
crystallizes, while that kept in the dark
has remained perfetly liquid And this
is why bees work in perfect darkness,
and why they are so careful to obscure
the glass windows whieli are sometimes
placed their in their depends hives. The existence of
young on the liquidity of
’he saccharine food presented to them,
nd if light were allowed access to this,
he syrup would gradually acquire a
-;ore or less solid consistency. It would
seal up the cel's, and in all probability
prove fatal to the inmates of the hive.
/ on dan Budget.
There were 5000 roses oa the table and
Ihe plates, ypergnes, dishes and cover
were of solid gold at the state dinner
William. Peterhoff, Russia, given to Kmpcr
THE FOUNDER OF CHICAGO.
Be Was a Coal Black Negro from
the Island of San Domingo.
[From the Chicago Times.)
The name of the real founder of Chic
ago, which has been left unsung by the
proud Caucasian and permitted to drift
into oblivion, is hereby rescued. It was
Jean Baptiste au Sable, and its owner
was a San Domingo negro, with com
plexion as black as the character of the
fiend who would attempt to bribe an
Alderman with a block of imaginary The
Stock in a mythical railroad. name
gave rise to a suspicion of French blood
in Jean’s veins, but there was nothing doubt
in any feature to show it, and no
he was an African of the purest type.
He had in his mind the founding of a
great empire in the wilderness, arid be
lieved that a commingling of negro and
Indian would produce the typical and invin- race
of the world—large in brain
cible in war. He had doubtless heard
legends of the moBt famous of his race,
Hannibal, who, descending after the Nile,
crossed into Europe, and Over
throwing the Homan legions advanced
upon the “Mistress of the World” with
a myriad of men. In order to do this;
too, it was necessary to march his hosts
across the Alps, and this was acoom
plished In a manner so Superb that the
effort of Napoleon but feeble 1
later was a
imitation.
It is certain, however, that Au Sable
had dreams of power and empire. He
thought first to ingratiate himself with
the neighboring tribes of Indians,
eventually consolidate them; and be- :
come chief of a great nation. As a pre
liminary step, and to provide for a
future capital, he prospected through
out the vast wilderness, and with pro
phetic vision could chose tins this as the determina- locality.
Nothing iioc, despite change wi-es blandish
and the' and
ments of real estate dealers at Marquette
and Fort Clark (now Peoria) he took
possession in 1739 of a strip of extending ground
lying north of the river and
Tom whatis now Clark street to the lake,
Thereon he built a hut and proceeded
to negotiate. white before and
Like many a man
since, Jean seems to have ft great head
for schemes; but ft poor one for diplo- dl
macy, and after two or three years
incessant toil and increasing intrigue
his vision of power faded away. Lo
was snspicons, and would have none ol
it, and this distrust the of his motives
seems to have brokeil adventurer’s
spirit, as he soon abandoned his claim;
and being desirous of ending his life as
soon and easily’ as possible located on
the Illinois river near Peoria, where he
soon died of break back ague. Thus
ended the dreamed of-empire and per
haps rights obviated law enabling the white necessity people of civil
to en
ter negro hotels and theatres in Chid
casro.
DISCLOSED BY A CLOUD BURST.
A Buried City Strangely Brought to
Light in New Mexico.
The propriety of a bill introduced a
day or two ago by Chairman Holman of
the Committee on Public Lands into the
United States House of Representatives,
to set apart a large tract of land near
Mexico, Coohite, on the liio Grande, in New
as a national reservation, on
account of its many archaeological re
mains, was illustrated and confirmed by
the Hon. Amada Chavez; one of the
leading lives citizens of the Territory, who
not far from that section of coun
try, Paso and who comes occasionally to El
on business.
He discovered a short time ago, one
mile north of the little town of Snu
the Maeto, the mins of an extensive city,
existcnco of which had never oven
been suspected before. The action of
the windshade covered the larger por
tion of the ruins with sand and other
detritus, and converted the whole into
an extensive mound, and it was only a
severe rain storm and cloud burst,
sweeping away one angle of this mound
and disclosing some heavy stone walls,
that made the discovery possible. Mr.
Chavez has since uncovered one or two
of the ruins and obtained a number of
interesting having relics. A skeleton was found
tlireq strands of beads around its
neck—one of turquoise, one of jet, and
the other of bone. There were also
large ttm earrings of jet and turquoise with
skeleton, and remains of the hair,
which was not black, but light brown,
besides ornamental pottery arrow-heads,
with a quantity of maize, partly carbon
ized.
This skeleton, with the artioles enu
merated, was found in a small chamber
of masonry built up with a very adhe
sive cement. The excavations thus far
made have discovered a large building,
with massive stone walls ana a tower at
each corner. It looks more like the re
mains of a citadel than an ordinary
kind, dwelling. and The the masonry is of the best
interior chambers are
plastered and painted white. In the
centre of this structure was found a
wafer reservoir, from which stone aque
ducts led in many directions. A dim
tradition among the nativo Pueblo In
dians located here a prehistoric city
named Gusto, which was still in exist
ence at the time of Cortez’s coming to
America.
Letter From the E.v-Slieritl'olChautauqua
I'oiinir. New Y ork.
Mayville, N. Y„ Dec. 2, 1885.
I am glad to say, from a long pergonal ex
perience with Aucocs’s Ponous Plastebs,
that I am able to endorse all the good things
that have ever been said about them, and sup
plement these by saying that I frankly believe
their value cannot be estimated. Their breadth
Of usefulness is unlimited, and for prompt and
sure relief to almost every ache and pain that
flesh is heir to, no other remedy, in my opinion,
•ither external or internal, equals them in cer
tainty and rapidity. X have used them at one
time for rheumatism, another tor backache,
fig-.m for bronchitis, always with the same re
sult— a speedy cure. L. T. Hauhixgion.
The Princes of Uajpootana, India, have vol
untarily abolDhed infant marriages.
Log Cabins were not
HM hot-houses and the people
who dwelt in them were
“■pf not The hothouse hardy, growths, healthy
wla y "-ere a
,w edies generation and the rem
QUH ! f used were simple
Warner’s Log preparations reproduced in
Cabin Cough and Con
sumption Remedy and Warner’s “Tip
pecanoe, ” the great stomach tonic.
Their Platform.
The convention of wholesale liquor
dealers end distillers, who met in Chick
ering Hall, New York, was in favor of
the 1 olio wing principles, regardless of
politics: “Fewer saloons; higher li
cense; closing saloons on Sunday; dis
couraging saloons where women and
children are allowed to buy liquor, either
for themselves or others; refusing to
supply money to and disreputable men in the
liquor business, prosecuting any li
quor dealer who may violate the law.”
In South Africa there are 223 Presby
terian congregations, numbering 54,320
communicants, and controlling five col
leges—-one each at Cape Town, Welling
ton, State.- Burghersdorf, in the Orange Free
—----.
A Dream tif Fair Women,
Tennyson in his exquisite poem, dreams of a
long procession of lovely women of ages past.
This is all very well, but the laureate would
have done the world a greater service if he had
only told improve the women their of the present how they
could health and enhance their
charms, This he the might of Dr. easily have done by
Prescription. recommending Health use is the Pierce’s best friend Favorite of
beauty, and the innumerable subject, ills to which wo
men are peculiarly its worst enemies.
Long experience lias proven that the health of
womankind walk in and hand, the and "Favorite inseparable. Prescription” It is
hand are
the only medicine for women, sold by drug
gists, ufacturers, under a that positive it will guarantee give satisfaction from the man- in
every case, or money will be refunded. This
guarantee has fatkfully been printed on the bottle
wrapper, and carried out for many
years.
There are 493 mountain peaks in the United
States more than 10,000 feet in height.
laing Trnub es and Wasting
Diseases can be cured, if properly treated in
time, as shown by the following statement
from D. C. Freeman, Sydney: “Having been
a great sufferer from pulmonary attacks,
and gradually it affords wasting away for the past two
years, Scott’s Emulsion me of pleasure Liver to testify that
Cod Oil with Lime
and Soda has given me great relief, and I
cheerfttlly similar recommend to myself, It In to addition, all suffering in a
way I would
say that it is pleasant to take.”
Laura Scliirmer, a singer in the harem of
the Turkish sultan, was by poisoned by cream
Offensive bredtli Remedy. vanishes with the use of Dr.
Sage’s Catarrh
The Adams Express Co., have made arratige
ments to introduce its system into Europe,
Leave hope behind,
. All ye who enter here!
So ran the dire warning which Dante read on
the portals of the Inferno.- So runs the cruel
verdict of your friends if you aid overtaken by
the first symptoms of that terrible disease, fiou
sumption. numbered!!’’ “Leave hope behind! Tour days are
And the suggestion against death
is given up in despair. But while there is life,
there is has hope! cured Dr. hundreds Pierce’s Golden of Medical Dis
covery cases worse than
vours; and it will cure you, if taken in time.
But delay is dangerous. No power can restore
a wasted lung; the "Golden! Medical Discov
ery,” however, can and will arrest the disease.
Charleston, S. C., has appropriated 85,000 for
the erection of two free bathing houses.
Children Cry for It.
If a child trill take a medicine with pleasure, offen
you may know that it is not in Hamburg anyway
sive to the taste. Children like them Figs,
and It is no longer necessary Dose to disgust Fig, Mack
with castor-oil. 85 cents. one
Drug Co., N.Y.
Much Pain and Suffering the may be avoided The by
child bearing woman By timely use of
Mother’s Friend.
Bronchitis is cured by frequent small doSfe'S
of Piso’s Cure for Consumption.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp
son’s Eye, water. Druggists sell at 25c. per bottle.
llff Ely’s Cream Balm,
iathe beat remedy for children
""‘“W^COLDinHESD, suffering frotn
SSOFFtES
OR
CATARRH.
u*aJ Apply Balm into each nostril.
KT.V BBOS.. 56 Warren St., N.Y.
m MOTHERS FRIEND
i4ai© LA8Cfyjr (ilp bum Easy «[
used a few month*
- confinement. "Write Jar look
PINE-NEEDLE OIL
Extracted from the needles of the Pine Tree, cures
lamg Troub e* Coughs and Diphtheria, also
illumeiitar ItheuniatiNin, Sample .Swellings, Ulcers
and Putrid s«r«*w. bottle 25 cts. Address
W. M. WHITE A CO., Box418, Atlanta, Ga.
III FISTULA
11 V 1 and a 1 Rectal Disease 8
y 1 / Sti b ° J ri 3 ? 5 £
■ or caustic. A radicalchre
I IIB IB gguaranteed ■ treated. Reference in every given. case
1 1UUU9MWBS&S!
Egnuc Sfevmt r-TT I) Y. Book-keeping, Business Forms
11 thoroughly Penmanship, taught Arithmetic, by MAIL. Short-hand, Circulars free! etc.
Bryant’s College, 457 Main St. Buffalo, N. Y.
AHUM HABIT
W Humane Remedy Co., I,aFayelte. lad.
m I Live at anything at home else and in make the more world money Either working sex. Costly for us outfit than
hide. Terms fkkk. Address, Truk & Co., Augusta, Maine.
PISO’S CUREyFOR CONSUMPTION
WANTED
EVERY
FARMER’S
WIFE
u Sees some of her Poultry
IS die each year without
i knowing how wnat the matter
1 was or to effect a
remedy nize the if Disease. she does recog
This is
m not right, of 25 as at an ex- (in
pei nse cent h
sta stamps) she can procure
giving the experience of practical a lOO-Page Poultry BOOK Kaiser
a T
(not an amateur, but a man working It for dollars an
cents) during a period of 25 years. teaches you
howto Detect and Cure Diseases: how to
Feed for Eggs and also for Fattening;
which FbwTs everything, to Save indeed* tor Breeding Pur
poses; know and subject. Sent yon should
on this postpaid for 25c.
. BOOK PUB. HOUSE*
134 Leonard Street* N.Y. City.
__
New and Second-Hand Machinery.
ire are Headquarters for Engines, Hollers, Saw Mills, Shingle and La&
Mill Outfits, Portable Corn and Wheat Mills, Millstones, Bolting
Cotton need Jlullers and Grinders, Belting, Saws, Piping, Etc.
In addition to New Machinery, we h are a large stock ol Second-Hand Engines, Boilers, Shingle Machjnw.
at his first half hour a experience in ■ ■■ h ■■■■ him dry in the hardest storm. It 1*
sgpsigg* ufJ
1
PQ BesseB™Huy &® E fooo
8 Important Aflv.' ul ^r
other prepared Foods.
BABIES CRY FOR it
invalids relish
WELLS, RICH/1RD5QM &
^e A to e fc?« iLuHftdbaby y B^fSd f r ^ ^' 1
to
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO-.IW ^
It’s Easy with to bvel '
Di/womDyTs
I an T j r Superior
IJi trf IN
^ Strength, Pastness
1 Beauty. f
•
7 PI <S>^. AND '
Warranted to r color more Simplicityj goods than otfJ
dyes ever made, and to give brilliant any
more »nt
durable colors. Ask for the Diamond, adm, '
no other. 36 colors ; 10 cents each.
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Burlington, It.
For Gilding or Bronzing Fancy Articles, US
DIAMOND PAINTS.
Gold, Silver, Bronze, Copper. Only so Ctt
I £ f~" HMTiTTTiTTm Best PISO:S UUKtJ) Cough WHtHt 1 ’U Syrup. rjTTJWTTW CURE ALL Tastes tLSt JTil M tAILS. J'f'mxma, FOR I
in in time. Bold by druggists. good. Use
pBaHagsu^fctsiaidstftSTy —
I believe Piso’s Cure
for Consumption saved
my life,— A. H. Dowell,
Editor Enquirer, Eden
ton, N. C., April 23,1887.
Ipiso
The best Cough Medi
cine is Piso’s Cure for
Consumption. Children
take it without objection.
By all druggists, 25c.
Ha
CURES Cough WHERE Syrupy ALL Tastes ELSE good. FAILS. Pee Q g|
Best
mi s U MP-Th©N ■ “
MEN AND BOYS!
Do yon want to
learn all abont How
n Horse ?
Good to Pick Out a
One ? How
fections to Know Imper- and so
Guard Fraud? against Howtogj m
Detect Disease vg
and effect a cure
{possible to when Tell same the ? How Age is 1
by the Teeth? the I qr-J 9 '
What to call Parts 7/'W»l
Different SrjsSwirapKsSls
SSSH*
DEFENDER m
i
Longr Handle, C*rtrid*re. By m»il postpaid. Finest
Saw Octagon Barrel.
Poeket Revolver. Send 6c. in stanps
for lllmtrated 100-paye Catalogue of Guns,
Rifles, Revolvers, Police Goods, k c. JOHN P.
1»OTJ£LL ARMS CO., HaMFre, Boston , Max.
1160 FARMERS ENGINES pba,n '
SAW MILL.
liege’s Circular Improved Saw iHillll I
;
With Universal
linear Log Beam Recti
Simulta
neous Set Workl
and Double Ec
centric Friction
Feed. Manufac
tured by the WORKS, „ _ SALMh »•-&
SALEM IRON „
§3 JONES
Tare Beam e nd B eam Box w
vaaffiesv Brery
opiate relic/hi the worst <»«»,insures
able
1 .OQ,ot Promts or by.maiI.8ag»fcF§EK|
C91 IS? III SiSS FI! |s3S Sas »-rj s
® g
-
A. N. U....... ........For.y-two,