Jones County headlight. (Gray's Station, Ga.) 1887-1889, December 08, 1888, Image 4

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I AGRICULTURAL TOPICS OP INTEREST RETjATIVE TO FAItU AND GARDEN. a' The Frightened Horae. The feeling of fright is probably a sen sation common to all animals from man kind down to the lowest grade of life. It is also true, that the higher the grade of life, the more sentient the animal, the keener is this sense developed. The horse is universally noted for hissagacity and intelligence, therefore in him tright is innate. When a horse manifests fear it is because he has by exercise of his reason decided that there is danger to himself lurking in some object, which he accordingly endeavors to avoid. That same reason will, if properly di rected, undeceive him and convince the animal that he is mistaken. The horse being unable to reason, except from his experience, you should convince th£ him, by careful examination, that object he dreads is harmless. Bring him in direct contact with it. It is a common saying that if the nose is touched to the object the animal will he satisfied; generally thte is true; the animal becomes ac quainted with his “enemy.” It is a ter rible mistake to use a whip on a fright ened horse. The animal is already ex cited, and will, in all probability, associate the whipping with the object of his dread. Kxertyour own common sense and calm your horse. Colts especially should receive most considerate treatment, and above all leave things make your lessons thorough. To the object of his alarm before hav ing made him thoroughly familiar and careless of it, is often worse, tenfold, than no attempt at all to break him Of hi* skittishness .—National Hone Breeder. Mnklnsr Vinegar In Small Quantities h Ve “° Clde r mi ! U ; “UP 6 * *hey .u may easily , make ,bymashmg 7h«n L P JT 1 “> apples P?™'« m ■hnnlri shoiiid then be put into a hall barrel svith holes in the bottom, and be placed over another tut. as a receiver. A fol lower can be placed on the pomace and be pressed down by a lever or stationary weights. J he juice should be kept in a “” n S.°i ,en > ant * ln “warm until . the vinegar is made. By frequently rep emshing us it is drawn out, any far ei s family can easily keep up their ‘ eW n l , P’ e,s m »slie(l and Putin • covered with and the . s o jar. water j ice o some soured fruits and berries, can be used for th,s purpose. Vinegar be^r not^o bUt it is t oth!-rr h*tenc«!if«Am VjneoBrIrom 7m.be ^ 8l U ‘bstances is some- ft times ikI f , !' e S !ir 18 f, °m ; soun d ni ® e 0 . £ ra P e8 Wim.vr,.,nr. hvir„iI,. n. , Ro!' V * i y C0U " ,er ' felted „]|J'.i. if 0rghUra u V1 “u five i 0 *£ , T Of w. A ? er W ? ! vpast ii nf Jr® strB \ - ' ned J” v 1 . ®® | of the Mu. n'rrror, n *• a l!e ■vrui. I a ? are miaH» fmm V ? c Giatliave ; ' a trnor) „ „ sharp , acidity, km y .'f®' 1 or mo las ■n *liu.ir.r at. , _ w r * lean* ° nS ° » ^ uter * not in liHip niri ’ i v' 1 egar . t to sour it, or ■tart it t Z2 . , 7.^ ? ,lttle yea f f * hnner hni n nf it £ Ke 810 ft W1 * to ieei.mit ii,,. >ne , honey vinegar ;» tiw. na p0l i!', <1 of ® hnnnu v‘l t *i. th .rou-hiy ‘ armil ' u ll< ss an g enera l ntilitv !lL ii«i'* T v' n , head of Aeu> J oik World. . Til., rtnirii ° r 1,1 k ar k ’ At the request of several of our sub scribers we give the following hints on the culture of rhubarb. The best time to plant rhubarb is in tho fall after frost fas* killed the leaves, or early in spring before it has made much growth, but it may be set out without much risk at i any time in early summer before July 1. The old roots should be divided so as ° n .Y° r two eyes ,o each pieceandshoiddbe ’ h 1 ^ set out of about Plow, three with ! n e ,rrow * a sraB D lour feet . between the rows. Cover two inches deep with a hoe. the land it in no way particular provided about grows upon, it is To heavv^m Zrtint T however, d “ W f demands ma , nUred very Heavy m iiuvrino muring , ten or fifteen cord. ]>er in’BitS» L,nS y k r .l h ,* trong is wanted. 'Tr> Hog u Ch manure is best i Spread the manure and plow under when preparing the land, ana put. some more along the furrows in nlanung Afterwards rake off every SaJ «i^7.‘.» , liea ,0 , ’v. 0HV al , e i i?ht * ““l 1 U Il° rubbish W fr ?J” about 110 pl.ints at each side, ao hll this with ma nure, and cover with plow, ridging the 3srnft an ? w CUltlv , t .°'’ ,d er t,le crowns. jho ridges In early and * ? cro8S -T lth ,,low an ^ c “ l ,1 T ator ’ and hoe un il it i* growmg too high. . inB^ ^ s^KiSr .li :^ n “oum 1 n ol its inn-n hi. J 1 Heavy y\e ,, a. Thirtv 7nn» have'been Sown T even Lv inn.im forty tons “j, The 1 j so ne A n0t ’ er » for , .U _ n,ck, its . milder * m 0l e th acid f“ - hut tnc crop which i the victoria . will pro- cron leu th.„ OS ,»■. too. .n.l often for ^10, The expense of market ing mostly at long distances is considerable. It ls grown within six or eight miles of market The bed should be replanted after shout five years bearing, as the roots spread about and crowd, making a large amount the of small .talks, involving double labor in cutting and bunching for market, and making an inferior product to that grown ob a young hrf. Anew plantation should not be cropped at all the first year, and will not produce a five years is m it* prime, The price of rhubard is always high early in the season, and some growers fandYJ'd'* sandy land on l the the south 1 i ,in side T 1 * of a fence, in so as to get it early.— Cultivator. Farm and Garden Notes. Keep tool* handy. Cut corn fodder from which tho sweet corn ha* been picked. houJ‘£ house this Im winter 8 * will pay l “. m th f increased P® uUr ! Every tfme you worry y our horses you shorten their lives and df ays of use fulness. unripe, Sheep are better scavengers for small, is claimed. wormy apples than swineare, it The English rarely drive their draught horses faster than a walk. Trotting a cart horse would seem barbarous to a cockney," The longer you put off transplanting be of winter-killing. French farmers report very beneficial results from the use of copperas solution as a manure on strawberries, pears, let tuce, peas beans carrots and vines. Mash dairy utensils, pans, pans and vats little carefully with cold water, in which is a salt or soda; then rinse, and then thoroughly scald with hot water, Professor E. W. Steward advocates flaxseed as a medicine for pigs. It is soothing and to the stomach and intestines, and it is also rich in food for muscle bone. To have fowls moult quickly they should be well fed, in good health," young and vigorous, }'„r./,\ and, according to the Poultry little extra stimulation d “ ri ” a A Mender or Artificial Limbs. The place, says the New York Tet* gram, looked like a ghastly caricature of a butcher shop in the land of the canni buls, but it was only the inner sanctum of a manufacturer of art.licial limbs, —hung Arms, legs, hands, feet—what you will on walls screened in glass cases or laid about in heaps, greeted the eye wherever itrested. '1 here were audacious pictures of gentlemen in various active employments who having “tried your valuable leg would have no other. One , of those grateful men was pictured m 1,10 ,ict of tiding a bicycle. Another I ( )0re his whole weight on an artificial , | leg while plying a miner’s pick at a mass of rock over his head. Still another stood on |,j s sound leg,and with the arti ficial leg drove a spade deep into the soil «f following a garden plot. Three were farmer. the plow, blacksmiths shoeing hordes, and a pedestrian without a nose with at least one artificial leg. “Do they really do all that;” inquired j “Perhaps not quite as well as you’d suppose from the cut, but it is true that there are a good many thousand men w jth artificial legs doing work that one BOUnd wou | d think likeiy to require the aid of limb8 „ “ Then you come P rctt y nearly sup plyng »ny natural loss.” “Pretty nearly. The war gave a great impetus limbs, to the manufacturer of artificial and we are still making limbs for thu vet “” “IIow long does an artificial limb last “That depends upon whether it is an arm or a leg and upon various other con siderations. I’ve known an artificial leg to be in use twenty-five years. The more elaborate attempts to counterfeit nature the more liable the member to get 0 f order and require renewal. We make a,m * »nd hands with which the wearer writes, uses knife and fork at table and p er f 0 rms many operations that one might “What think impossible.” is the cost of artificial limbs?” hundreds. “Anything from a few dollars up to The simplest ‘peg legs’ or wooden legs cost from $5 to $50 each, Arras cost from $25 to $T5. Hands ara from $10 to $25. Then there are in contrivances for hiding de formities. They may cost almost any thing—the deformity price varying with the nature of the to be corrected. Oh, our friends with a leg or arm missing are and not so badly off as they once were, if science goes on in its march of progress there is no telling how soon the so-called cripples may be objects of envy.” — — Mild-Mannered Cannibals. Everv travc i tr v ew Zealand alwav* dil exprcs.es astonishment, when they ‘ c „; er tho ca „ nibal propensities of the inhabitants, „nercd that so gentle and pleasant- j nia “ a such' neoiile could s»vag“s become occasion fcroctous jc n ,i e ’ who wrote a very reliable ’ in- I to S | U t und 1)l t Iittle k j 10wa acc present! ount the Mamis very early in the centur d kindly y t speaks of the gentle manners | an “toward wavs of a New Zealand chief wlu,m he discovered to be an inve terate cannibal, lie relates .hat he visited the ulacc where was cookin<» the body of a voung slave cirl that his friend bad killed for the nurnose The head „a, severed trom the bodv the four quiirters> moved, with the pr i neil ,, d bones were compressed and packed into a 8nia li oven ‘in the ground, and covered with earth. It wa-a case of un ju s tifi a ble cannibalism. No revenge was grntititd by the deed, and no excus* could be made that the body was eaten to hat perfect h their triumph. Farle nJy says ! ! '-nod that th fie-h takes hours to Cook, that it is very tough if no t thoroughly cooked, but that it pulls l ,° liku a } ,iece of blottin g P !l per, if Well done. lie continues that the girl of ™ a handsome.pleasant and looking sixteen, one he used quently to see about tho Fah. — Genfio. man ^ Magazine _ »«"'«»'*•• ror 11,. nduotio. of ^ipo.o Panting has, in Germany at least, bt*eu superseded by pedestrisnism, and the walking but up-hill. is not This to be upon level ground, new fad will certainly not be fieshy adopted by indolent persons, and most people are more 01 less d s inclined to exertion. In fact, la/.iness i* responsible of for much of the accumula tmu fat. The new relief from obesity has been experimented with bv the re ner reaucea n.s weight ^^ from in ‘ two his ® hun- an - died and seventy-four L pounds to one ..a.!»«,. t new system is to strengthen the muscle of the heart, which is best done by climbing heights. The patient is in SSlSlS’jSi until palpitation ZS1 comes 1 on, Rt when \ 8i °\ he ! ^ is tostop, but not to sit down, and then to go on. H* must walk several hours a dav and climb more or loss Siowlv fessor Uertel, of Munich, is the inventor of this nsw “obesity and heart cure," and he advocates mountain climbing foi valvular defects of the heart as well a* for ell diseases associated with carp* lency,— Bede * Hmctn. WOMAN’S WORLD. PLEASANT LITERATURE FOR FEMININE READERS, The Trous*eau Not So Elaborate. A good Parisian dressmaker says that the troussea has ceased to be the gigantic outfit which it used to be. Fashions months hence HaK^dosen dresses nt qimlity'bvh^niarents. J The dress, The usual excel uum ia fi ve> t0 it; jmr - W, which can be ma le to serve, di vested of orange blossoms, at dinner parties and the opera; a traveling cos tume; a visiting gown: a morning gown, and a ball dress. There is the same economy shown and in providing underclothing hats, bonnets and mantles, is only provided cleanliness in a quantity and comfort. ampiy necessary for It is found that the store-keeper is the b. st custodian of feminine finery, and tkat the le.s there is given ovtg to 4 } h ®. safekeeping of the servants the ,L er ' eu a quan i y o a mien i bov . es are suc h 8 t0 tera I ,er ’ an ,' 1 . . . another 11 is a fearful responsibility for a frenchman entering the wedded state to have a wife with a vo.ummous trous eeau. If she dies within three years after her marriage,he is bound (allowance being made for wear and tear) to return i, to her parents. Whatever objects are lost must be accounted for. He is fur nished with a list of the garments, and another is retained by the bride’s family. The notaries of bride and bridegroom also receive one each. The struggle for influence between the mother-in-law designate begins when the bride-elect must be for placed her outfit. in the hands of a the dress- old maker One of ladies wants her own favorite priestess of fashion, and so does the other. There i s often such a tug of war that the match is l,token olL— Argonaut. The Kra ° r Hilir Dressing, The era of hair dressing is at hand, days in which the simpler styles will be forgotten and women shall vie in th« elaboration of their tresses as now thej do in the cut of their gowns, What is much nearer and surer is the prophecy of rnentof growing hair, individuality in the arrange. the iashions in hair dress iug are dangerous things to pass from hand to hand. What is one woman’i beauty is the deformity of another. Good-bye and bon voyage to you, Psyche knot. The pug of Cupid’s lady love has worn well with the summei girl. and It is easy to arrange under sailor hats easy to keep in place. But to wear it with a home toilet wants a fact i as like regular as Sappho’s, a figure poised j ! 1 !iaiia ’ s ’ the lightness of movement and grace of a Hebe, the culture of an j Aspasia and the clinging robes of a god- j or eastern queen. Alas for tin and pug-nosed girl, the high-cheek boned, the long chinned girl, the girl of the Homan nose and hard i features, when the Psyche knot walks i abroad, degenerated into a hair club, j with two corkscrew curls depending liki the tassels ot a patrolman’s knob stick ! | from the end. Hair is going higher; it is also coming | lower, and neither style ought of neces- j sity to matter much to you or me. l ook I at your face first and no fashion that suits it will be wrong. ! i f the simpler styles, which one need ] not call a hair-drcsser to airange, a fiat coil of small braids wound pancak# fashion against the back of the head threatens to come in. With a full,round cast, of features and straying tendrils ol front hair to relieve it, this plate coiffuri sometimes goes well. A small, round coil, low in the neck, but not resting ob the collar is more generally becoming than any other suit of hair; it is almost indispensable when the ears are promi nent the Dead, or large, mak piling iu the hair on top the of ng, such cases, offending members more noticeable. IU-«haned ears want the hair pulled loose above and behind them. For the evening toilet it is probable that the bang has received its death Blow. It struggles bravely, but the Louis XV. and A VI. styles will kill it. « ^ould not be surprising if a bare fore head were exhibited this winter by many women who can do it with impunity and B ome who can’t. A coming style caiis 1()r “ soft roll over which the front hair is carried up in waves, the ends being coiled and fastend in round, wavy loops with small gold Allowed or amber fall combs, A curl or two is to on the forehead, but not to hide the brow, With such a coiffure the home hair dresser twists the back hair into a flatfish French toil, coiling the ends loosely on t°P- For occasions calling for moreelabo r » te arrangements as many puffs, twists end loops as the mind of man ever de ''’■sedare intricately entwined.— Detroit ^ Fashion Notes. mbbon bonnets wiu ba worn through the I autumn " ™' “PP ^*>5 1 * ue of designs the new upon felt fu them. bonnets . . have likewise Gray and blue reseda and ruby are effectively combined. Vaslim,'recolored broca.led ribbons ara *»«"<»' '»»“« Miniature , brooms of green gold, . _ with . phitinnni hand ,es, are worn as earring* by lndles of P olltlcal proclivities. Polonaises with diagonal fronts are in high being favor, and have the advantage of becoming alike to slender and Rout figures. Long redingotes, plaited skirts, pol onaises and Directoire coats are the lead iug characteristics of the nearly im ported gowns. Ji^?Z25r&LS?5S: A favorite arrangement u; v, ii of eolnrs in » ^ pre m wn n Sea. w P W,th 1 ap ..e ‘ »irtnre summer, ” .imil.r imported tAtW. worn in during f the are fe!t an velvet for dresse '• autumn and w ; nter wear .... Black and , white is the , thing for onvx D' j™«i •!, -wi. ta.k ttick 1 ” 8 jet are the proper caper for the eam!1 g s m depth of woe. - ■■ -— Victor Hugo said that God had created woman the coquette as hob as be had made man the fosL ffHI WOMEN WED. IT* Romance Whatever Nowaday* in finding a Husband. A man asked me the other day how women find husbands. It was suoh a puzzling qud^fcion to me that I constitu ted myself a committee of one and went ronnd among a lot of married women to see how their husbands proposed to , s.™rt-*kd«ki an flbsolute romanoe of love! There wwn’t qnewh^ husband had gotten down on his knees om&tihetond of her, unless one’s ^trok^n h^d wd ^sought wouMweJ J. ,1! heart ’ that she blm i„ , „ m ,.i ( i,„,l fivpr known the raj held with f P ‘ 8 prcnouri’ied ■ ,, brave 0V e r that unless she accep . b e would kill her and then 1{ j qq lt . re wr.sn’t one who had . Mined even at the dagger’s point, , , B j n „j e w ,f 0 bad been drugged d d( y while in a semi-consoious ^ oertain amount D oro thy, I confess to a of disappointment. The nearest I could get b as to how the question of marriage ssti™ lb “‘ This is (lel icionsly vague, but it seems nif , an that they knew the man, that ^ their » •« ■> timt their frocks for HnAml/n -niti-ment i then in’ when there Street was I Mhd 1 a YtV.tr.nfthDi»tra?tiri Hon wasn’ on ^ey suggested J*? that it was about time ( tliYern n rnnrnVfl This JJ is b ra! experience. And I th k itaBin ld a s i )aul0 . Few women v_ vn ..rmnrlnnitv to malTy , and that ought to be accompanied b y all the frills and frivolities that tl e b st noyel writer dreamed of. Ti e Howells and James business in tl e way of classic love making may be most desirable for nervous people; it may calm and soothe them, but xvhen cham pagne and love are offered it wants to be sparkling, and it wants to taste as if suoh nectar had never been offered be fore. The cigarette imbued, white-skinned, colorless eyed, smooth-faced young man that is so prevalent just now will never offer anybody anything but the flattest cid^r for- champagne, and when it comes to this, I say, give me ice water and platonic. —New Yprk Star. Before and After. A few days ago as a Ridge the Road driver car was coming up Luke avenue, stopped on being signaled by a young man on a crossing not far from Driving Park avenue, says the Rochester Democrat, The young man was accompanied by a rather pretty ‘light, young woman, who was dressed in a airy summer attire, and carried a fancy-colored sun parasol, Tho young man jumped aboard the car first, and rushed inside, securing the only seat vacant, leaving the eould. young Of woman to follow as best she course every one expected that he would give up his seat to his lady, but he did not do so, and she,after standing awhile holdmgon to a strap, without concluded to have of a seat anyway, and, a word warning, plumped down on tho lap of her escort, saying as she did so: “I’m as tired as you are, darling, and you will have to hold me until I a seat.” He gave a grunt of the hog kind, and told her in plain English that “she could stand or sit on tho door for all he cared, but he would not hold her.” At this several mole occupants of the oar offered their seats to the young woman, but she declined their offer and said: “He is as able to hold me now as he was before we were married, and I will sit here where I am.” The passengers were up to this time the silently smothering their laughter, but last was too much for them, and as one remarked: “The car will be thrown off the track if we don’t stop laughing so hard.” Realizing the that ho was making a target of him self, the young man rose hastily, nearly throwing hxs darling for the wife on the floor, » n d[made a rush door saying as he did so. Aon take my seat, i It walk home.” and left, the oar. The wife was not dismayed in the least, but sat there quietly enjoying the fun as well as did the rest of the passengers, Th(} Comi * j. j The young Crown Prince of Germany, aged 6*. who will be emperor when the present young emperor is dead, is already being turned into a soldier. Every day he is compelled for over half an hour to move his chubby legs and hold his im mature body according to military dis cipline, and is severely drilled by an an cient sergeant major. He wears the regulation uniform, and returns the sa lutes of aged generals with dignified nonchalance. **-»peakerof theAseembiy of the stats ^ or 1-8B. f Albany, April 16, My family for the last twelve years have been nsing Allcocx’s Ponotts Plasters, and have foundthemwonderfully efficacious ln coughs, colds, and pains in the side and hack. About ten years ago I was thrown from a wagon and badly bruised. In three days these plasters entirely removed the pain and sore aess. TAvice they have cured me of severe colds M dm, ttorn which h. h.a .od,„d two m * James W. Hvsted. r^^for's33 .. __ 01 ^ H j ' . ^ 1 , it c roaa 000.0(». A Secret Of good health is fuimd in the regular move Liver.'* Theseorg^s were inteuded bf nature Kb“ S SiWtog JarnUy d^es in- i? of and regularities which wi.i surely be -accepted,” be averted Purgative by the timely use Powc.iul.for of Ur. Pierce’s the P-easaut pellets. wonderful SsaSO'Sa&'itiS'S organism witli wkick «5SB w© ai© cr© atod * The kitchen of the White House in Wash ^0..!* run by a colored woman, t a Poser! . why will you suffer « n!i indigestion. ccm«ti nation, piles, few c-euts torpid will liver^and buy Hamburg sick-headachy I igs when S^asBn5«fis«a!s» a Mact Urug Co., N. Y. Safety o inoriier ami rbiUl unit icss liability to aU'Uup'en.antUi.'SS after confinement, result from theuse of Mother’s Friend. Best, oaai-at to use and cheapest. Pi»o’» Bested, for Cstaarh. d# DrnagriO SOh. Philanthropic Work. Ladv Herbert, of England, widow of Lord Herbert, who was secretary of war in Great Britain during the late War in this country, has come to the United States to work among the colored peo ple of the South. She will erect a col ored orphanage in Baltimore. Lady Herbert is extremely charitable, and has passed a number of years in the West Indies in doing good to the negroes. She is the mother of ten children, the Earl of Pembroke being her eldest eon. Another son, Hon. Michael Herbert, an attache of the British legation at Wash ington, is to marry Miss Leila Wilson, of Virginia. The mausoleum of the Emperor Fred erick, of which th: coiner stone has just been laid at Potsdam, will be a repro duction of the Sepulchre Church at Je rusalem. Honey-Moon. “Say, Perkins, old boy, why don’t mother-in- we eee you at the club any more? Has your the fact law shut down on you?” ‘ No, Brown, happy that of the matter is, my home is so now there is no inducement for me t<;.eave it. You look incredulous, but it’s a positive fact. You see. tional my derangements wife used to sutler common so much to her from sex, fac- tnat her spirits and her temper fault, were of gready but af- it fected. it was not her course, made home unpleasant all the same. But now, since she has begun to take Dr. Pierces la vorite Prescription, she has been so well and so happy that we are having our honey-moon ail over again.” ’the composing room of the New York Times is in the thirteenth story. If P ii Herd's from Consumption, Scrofula, Bronchitis, and General Debility will try Scott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with Hypophosphit.es, 11 ey will find immediate ie i ief and permanent benefit. The Medical Pro fession universally declare it a remedy of the greatest value and very palatable. Road; 1 have used Scott’s Emulsion in several Results cases of Scrofula and Debility in Children. most gratifying. My little patients take it with pleasure. 111 W. A. Hulbebt, M. D., Salisbury, . is Statistics largest show that raised this in year’s the U nit potato ed States. crop the ever Use the surest remedy for catarrh —Dr. Sags’*. _________ Eight missionary ships are now cruising in tlio North Sea. TOT The Special Offer of Boston, Mass., Of Youth's Companion, should be which we publi bed last week, opportunity no ticed by our readers, a the comes but once a year. Any new subscriber to Tub Companion who will send $1.75 atone, can have the paper free to January 1,1889. offer includes and for a full y; ar from t!. at date. This lour Christinas, holiday New numbers, Year and for Easter, Thanksgiving, all the II e ] ust rated Weekl y Su pplements, and the' An nual Premium List, with 500 illustrations. Really a $2.50 paper for only 51.75 a year. If afflicted with -ore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp Ron’s Eyewater. Druggists sell at 25c. per bottle. MM $98 Sewlag-llfachinft’ •«sabli»n iTo at eturo aflWi Bi £ Zii& nt \trade pinclnj in OUT all part#, macblne*A byf PllZt vJ y, d good# where the peoule can _ sc* _ 4(l them - we will soud rr«e to on* in wing-machine each locality .the made rery ia I hthc best #• I world, with *11 the attachment*, ^aSftlino wilialao sondlree* and complct* of our costly valuable art m w£atft|isample8. tgtihow what In return send, we to ask those that who you 4 we u SdxrNf&mav tmocths call all at chall your become home, and your after own 0 :|f) 1 ipropertr. fmade after Thie the Singer *r*nd machine patents, is k which have run out: before patenta run out it sold for $©#, with tho tachments, and now tells for M ®S»SO. Best, strongest, world. most All use- in re* BeB«sSaiffee. fPfttl machine m the required Plain, ______ 1 No capital brief instructions given. Those who write to us at once can se cure free the best sewing-machine in the world, and the finest line of works of high art ever shown together in America. A Box 149. Main©* wM _ LY’S uBml Ely’s Cream Balm, Is worth $ | OOO to any h'AY-FEVERf Pi S A"! Man, Woman or Child suttei’iiiff from if4W CATARRH. Apply Balm into each nostril* U-SAJELY BROS.,06Warren St.,N.Y* Only Printing Ink Works In the South. & EVANS, Manufacturers of all kinds of Printing Inks, ATLANTA, (HOEfilA. MOTHERS FRIEND tHeOt^Uioiafewnontltf 01 LB BIRTH £AJY f; ShORfESlS Before confinement ‘WnUjcr iook. * Tf 5 TiriFISTUL SS S.uu il Rsct&l Dlsc.-.sc A 8 n m 1 painless treated by a of time from pro" cess. No loss business. No knife, ligature or caustic. A radical gwkk guaranteed in every case treated. Reference given. Dr. Whitehall It. G. St.* JACKSON, Atlanta, 42* Ga. *9T &WiMCATARRH where all other remedies fail. Our method of direct and continuous medication of the whole pespirar tory system produces same climate. elfect as a favorable change of . No smoke or disagreeable BOOK odor. full ILLUSTRATED application. giving particulars,free upon COOT SENSE mm CORE 66 State St. Chicago, III. V JONES m f. PAYSthe XXXI FREIGHT 5 Ten Wagon Scales, Iran Levers, Steel Bearings, Brasc Tar* Beam end Beam Box for .-V Every atieScale For free pnv* list mentloa this paper and address JONES OF SiNGNAMTON. BINGHAMTON. N. Y? ___________ for C'ljiK.Wl'faS'H.® colony, special inducements to settlers, • SIGNOR. ^al FERRf i SEL01IER. sa n D i e 8<>. Blair Oval , sPi!is.%'“S?R?m“"‘ Box. 31) round. 14 I’llU. ftPlUM _ HABIT f*y^. e *Sani < 4 _ n or°Home _ tarh.m « iiu"* iS!e^Co.°,iTFaSlTfe,imt! i i thoroughly taught by MAIL. Circulars Buffalo, N. free. Y. Bryant's College, 457 Main St, aOLOkA O lor Consniiipiive* and Astamat \jHcs. Send 2c. for it. I>n. BaBtlstt, Boulder, Uol. UiiaTEft tfMfflSU to B1TY A FARM in this locality. Curtis i Wright, J}33 Broadway, N. Y. PEERLESS DYES Sold Are et the DEfooism RF.t*T. o Thurber b Co., a 4 Ti’.e ^ ^ invested three ► I * uiau who has from to five dollars iu a Rubber Coat, and BB m (not style) a garment that will keep at his first halt hour's experience in impt a storm finds to his sorrow that it is hardly netting, a better not protection feels than a mos- if BI1 ■ “ SLICKER,” a name familiar to every quito being badly only chagrined w ■ Co%<-roy all over the land. With them at so taken in, but also (9 ■ pi ■ the only perfect Wind and Waterproof feel s if he does not look exactly like pd Bn Coat la‘‘Tower’s Fbh Brand Slicker." doesDrt Ask tor the hw “FISH th. BKAXD” Slicks* I I bl « and uke no other. Ifyonr .torekwpn vws! brakd. .endfordweriptivecatalogue. A. J.Towr.t» Simmons St.. Boston. Mast. \ £*• I y&SffsoS Possesses many Important Advantages over >n other prepared Foods. w BABIES CRY FOR IT. INVALIDS RELISH IT. Make* Plump, Laughing, Healthy Bable*. Regulates the Stomach and Eowelg, Sold by Druggists. B5e., 50c., Sl.oo WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., burliiibtoii.vt A Portlollo Baby of beautiful Portraits. baby portraits, print** Give Every Baby’s Mother name wants and these pictures; send at ono£ age. WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Props,, Burlington,Vt if s Easy to Dye WITH T)i^MOHD0yIS 1 j89+ Superior IN I Strength, I Fastness, [ Beauty,; AND [ Simplicity, Warranted to color more goods than nnv other dyes durable ever colors. made, and Ask to for give the more brilliant and other. 36 colors; Diamond, each. and takt no 10 cents WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Burlington, Vt. For Gilding or Bronzing Fancy Articles, USE DIAMOND PAINTS. Gold, Silver, Bronze, Copper. Only 10 Cent*. p ETERSON’S MAGAZINE ia th© cheapest and best of the lady’* r of hooks, literature, excelling art, ail and others fashion. as a iuagazfot £ m LIGHT original novelets will le given ehfirj j stories, during from 1889, the besides numerous of of th$ I pens some most popular writers of the clay. 0u| list of contributors is unequaled. G HERE plates; plates, patterns, sides hundreds will and large printed be, handsome double-sized in of 1889, fine in colors, fancy wood-illustrationf 14 colored elegant or monthly, work-tabll faehioa steel le» e VERY dress to dresses. number cut number pattern, out in itself, her will worth own contain as it the will or a her full-size price enable children’s of a papei lady ths © ENOWNED subjects cles; valuable “Talks these, by for features places a Trained handsomely-illustrated with and for a Nurse”—will 1889. people series will of papers— furnish prov« artb © I0K-R00M, i recipes; furnishing, also son ” a invaluable mothers’ articles toilette, and department, household to on every cooking, the woman. garden, management; make and “Peter* house* othei © UR newest and in for fashion bonnets ladies outdoor and and and department most wear; children, hats. stylish alio both will the designs lor latest contain everyday in style* drert the A N Vow is tho time to subgcribe or to get up a | club. Terms, 82.00 per year, with gieal I reductions to clubs and Sample elegant copies premium * o* •m V for gfttffng up clubs. ^^ to those desiring to get up clubs. PETERSON’S MAGAZINE, Plnladelphia, Fb. "™ 806 Chestnut St., KlNTION THIS PAPER._________________. every 4 FARMER’S WIFE Sees some of her wttliou* Poultry 7 die each wliat year the niattef f knowing how to effect • i lf was or S - S C t1. y e^~ 8 ffi 0 mit M not right, 25 as at an ex- (*® pense of cenis stamps) 100-Fng© she can BOOK pro' Uiy a Foultrv Kalscr giving ‘not tho experience of a practical working fOTdoltais ana an -.luring amateur, hut a man It tench, s yon cents) a period of 25 yenrs._ how *e how to Select and Cure DUeasesi flattening! Feed for Eggs nnd also tor Breeding I h which Fowls to Save for 134 Leonard Street* N* »• Ctty*„ MEN AND BOYS! Ilo you want to rW; : lenrn all about it Hors in V How to l’ick Out a V- ■K Good One? How to Know Imper- L*-"’ fect ious and so Guard eg uinst Fraud? Howto£0&USji Detect Disease and effect a cure XNNNYN when same is m possible? Tell the How Age ■ v to ? by the Teeth Oj What to call the Dili'ereat Farts of the Animal? Horse / Fropcriy f ? *] .his. ‘S 1 "! Ilo.v to Shoe a Information relating and other Valuable HORSE fe BOOK, w l. we will STAMPS. forward, c p a i d f’?)N??Y- 25 STS. IN HORSE ROOK CO.. 134 L eonard St.. N. *. HOW MANY LINKS IN THE CHAIN? SISS IN CASH CIVEN AWAY 1 Mail I your answer with 55c. «ilver. and yoa will receive/?« for *lx mouths the brighte*t the U. and S. IB most intereiting family newspaper in wnKuwK&HiraRfl m First correct traeic will also receive mi |50 in cash; 9d,|’i5; 3d,fl5; 4th, $10; 5th,$5; next 50 $l each. Premium* will be distributed March 1, 188y, and names of winners published In asssass- Th» ____ ^ nrfra Xte Friend, Chicago, Ill. is's^Tir Plso’s Remedy for Catarrh is the Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. A' Sold by druggists or sent by mail. 50c. E. T. Hazeltlne, Warren, Pa. .trial .Ot),ot ro-v.nr.3 DrngiiBt. th* L.r,),icnl b^m siLSamjjiym Price.A Qc, Wfl I S1 or LOWMENt SOCIETY, Dox 846, Minneapolis, Min*. m live at bom* and make more money working for ns thorn » VI at anything else in the world. Either sex. CostlyotttN* Mam*. . . Terms raxx. Address, , TECB b CO., Aagusta, * efsSJS5eS15S CJl S r « U..........................Forty-six, ’88