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FOR FARM AM) GARDEN.
ArtVANTAGER* OF LONG RWnnr.R.
tVc always favor leaving tho slubblo
long in harvesting. The straw is worth
as much to bo loft on the field as pro¬
tection for young clover as it is in tho
barnyard. Most grain growers havo
more straw than they know how to w-e
with profit. When snosv comos, this
long stubble holds it evenly distributed
to a depth that will not readily thaw
away with one or two days of warm
weather. This removes ono of tho diffi¬
culties in clover growing in many
northern latitudes, when clover often
winter-kills nearly as badly as wheat.—
American Cult.v nor.
HOW TO TREAT HOUSES.
There are two things which should
bo dono by overy farmer who owns hor¬
ses; I he fir st is to abolish the whip, and
the other to provido rubber blankets
for tho protection of his naimnls from
the rains an 1 the cold win 1). A rub-
her blanket lined with a woolen one is
a perfect protection tor the winter; it
affords warmth and shelter from the
storms, while by prop-r majo tho un¬
der lining may always be kept dry. To
thin k of one’s horses is a duty; this care
aud thoughtfulness mark tho kindly
owner and will never be ncg'.ec el by ft
man svho has a right appreciation of the
usolu ness, kindness, docility an 1 acuto
sensitiveness of these sagacious animals,
who knosv a kind owner and in many
svnys rclurn tlie good treatment re¬
ceive 1. If a horse is dumb, his actions
often speak better than words, and one
who loves his horse as he should can
easily interpret their eloquent sign lan-
guage and will never use or need the
cruel whip.— N.u> York Timet.
SUMMEH FUEL.
Prepare, during the winter or early
spring, sufficient fuel for summr.
From tho lima the plow can be startel,
until the corn is cribbed, time is too
precious to bo used for work that can
as we i be done at another season. To
chop wood in July or August is decid¬
edly hot work; and if the summer
stove-wood is prepared now, the work
will not tie put on wife an I girls dur¬
ing tho summer. For summer use,
light, dry wood that will burn spilckly
nnsl die down quickly, is tho best.
Wood may now be cut green, when it
works easiest, an l if properly store I,
it wii 1 be dry by tho time it is wanted.
Such timber as ottonwood, white elm,
wild cherry, etc., which makes very in¬
ferior winter fuel, is excellent for
summer. The logs are most easily worked
by sawing them, with n cross-cut saw,
into slovc-wood ie.igth, and splitting
afterward. The logs can be hauled up
most easily during tho winter, when a
sled can bo used. Corn-cobs aro excel¬
lent summer fuel, aud aro well wortli
saving for this purpose .—American
Ayr iculturiet.
FEEDING GRAIN TO DAIRY CATTLE
It is suid that it does not pay to feed
grain to cows. This can be true of
only inferior cvttlo, and it is poor
policy to feed these at all after they can
be brought to the block. Nothiug is
more certain than that tho highest profit
lies on liberal feeding of good cows.
Tho yield" must be made abovo tho
average, and this is accomplished by
(he conjunction of gootl feed nud good
animal. It is good practice to put
every available dollar into a good busi¬
ness aud to get rid of a poor busine s
nl ogethcr; and to put all the food that
the animal can digest into a good cow.
A poor cow should bo got rid of alto¬
gether. The man who finds that it
do03 not pay to feed gram to his cows,
should change his cosvs rather than his
feeding. Ilo should use, not less grain,
but better cows. It may be that lie has
been feeding unwisely, not in the
amount, but in using tho kind of grain.
Ciws giving milk should havo a food
richer in albuminoids than tho food
proper for fattening animds. It would
be hurd to make a good profit by fee 1-
ing c >rn altogether, even to good cows.
—Americ tn Agriculturist.
NEW-FANGI.El) MILKING.
The teat is ablo to hold a consider-
ab c quantity of milk, which, when
squeer d out, leaves a vacuum that is
immediately filled from tho ducts above.
Bo the act of milking consists in press¬
ing out the milk from tho teats by tho
clo iug of the Ha iti from above down-
5vaid. If the pressure is not made first
from the upper part of the teat the milk
may bo forced back insteal of down-
5var 1, an l many slow milkers do lose
t me in this way, an l no doubt injuro
the cow. Dry milking shoull bo tho
rule. Too wet hands or teats is injuri¬
ous to tho cow, and will came tho skin
to crack and bscorns sore. It is a
nauseous thing to do, nnyhoiv, aud the
ilippcry feeling i’, or ought to be, very
disagreeable to a cleauly person. It is
useless, an 1 serves no gool purpo>c,
nor does it “got more milk.’’ A new
fangled idea is to rub glycerine on the
teats aad the u lder, so as to s'rip the
cow and leave the skin 3oft and supple.
This is equally useless, and more
trouble than to dip the filthy lin¬
gers in the milk and daub the tea’s
with it. Any tnilksr, if ho wishes to
“strip the teats,’’ may do so with pnr-
feet case without w ittiug them, And
the udder and teats of a cow always
milked with dry hands will always be
soft, smooth and supple. If the teals
should be cracked or torn by briers at
any time, a little plain vasriine applied
before millying will solten the skin and
pnse the soreness, and the wounds wai
soon heal. Another fad is the milking
with both hands at tho satns timo in-
\ milkers do
stead of alternately, Samo
this to rest tho writts, but the idea that
it increases the milk flow is nonsense.
Tho milk can he got out—overy drop—
by tho use of tho hands alternately, and
this, the usual way of milking, is tho
oasiost for tho wrists, which nro the
most taxel in tho svork.— N. Y. Tribunt.
VARIETY OF FOOD FOII MILK.
Dairymen do not, as a rule, give
sufficient attention to tho matter of pro¬
viding a variety of foo I for their cows.
A variety increases the relish for food.
A man will soon tire of ono or two
kinds of food if fed continuously od
them, and a cow will likewise tiro of at
continuous ration of ono or two kind*
of food. She will thrive better even if
a poorer quality of food be substituted
for part of tho ration. Milk is a com¬
plex fluid, composed of nil tho elements
of the animal holy, an I for its produc¬
tion in largs quantities, abund¬
ant supplies of good food S’
sufficient variety nro needed, >
mixturo of various kind) of grasses will
produce more milk and better milk than
any ono or two kinds. Au old pasture,
if a good one, is better for a cow than
recently seeded pasture). An old pas¬
ture usually contains a large variety, ten
to fifteen of grasses, while new pastures
usually contain only two or three kinds.
Milk produced from a cow fed on red
clover or timothy hay alone will produce
loss highly flivored bultcr than that
yielded by cows fed ou ha/ from fields
where there are several kin Is of grass
growing. Fodder corn is good in it
place, to give variety of food, Lu
should not be tho principal food given.
Cornmcal is one of tho most valuable
foods for a cow, but a mixture of com¬
mon!, bran and cotton-seed meal is bet¬
ter. Givo variety and your cows will
yield generously .—American Cultivator.
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
Keep tho hens warm to get more eggs
in cold weather.
The best romedy for glanders is to
kill the diseased horse.
The cows naw need extra rations to
keep up the flow of milk.
Liquid mauure is excellent for plants
if not applied too strong.
Look nftcr the condition of stored
fruit, vegetables and roots.
Cornstalks contain more potash than
any other fodder fed to cows.
Do not allow rats about your hen
house. Tho damage they can do pays
one to fight them off.
To raise strawberries successfully the
ground must have rested the year pre¬
viously as a summer fallow.
A most disgusting picture of dirt is
that of a dirty dairyman, with dirty
hands, milking a dirty cow in a dirty
barnyard, ausl catching the milk in a
dirty pail, where it is left to absorb the
dirty odors of a dirty atmosphere.
It is impossible to bread profitable,
chickens from overfed an 1 stimulated
fowls—a bilious hen cannot lay a woll-
developed egg and the cluck cannot de¬
velop its several organs aud parts in
perfection from a poor egg.
Tho only way to suppress wee Is is to
suppress thorn boforo they seed, and
tlie only way to get useful plant-growth
of some sort iustead of the bunoful
weeds is to rub the so out of cxisteuco
before tlsoy have male any of their rob¬
bery of gruwth at all.
It is not yet clear that thoroughbred
cows may in the practical dairy go
further in profitable dairying than high
grades, but tho grading must be dono
each time with a full-blood sire, and
keep tho influence on the dairy side,
which it is impossible to do with a
grade sire with a pur.ially unknown nu-
cestry.
A Banner of Raltlesiinkc Skin.
A lady residing on tho west si do lias
perhaps tho most unique banner that
lias over been seen in Kansas V ly. It
is as beautiful as it is unique, and is
prized l>y its owner for its beauty and
oddity. It is made of tho skin of an
enormous rattlesnake, with a back¬
ground of plush. The snake skin was
sent the Indy by a friend, svho lives in
Tcxa«. It is beautifully tanned, tho
back being colored and covered ssitli
spots resembling small scales, which ou
the background of plush look for all
the world like uiosnic. The skin
is over five feet loug without the head
and tail and fourteen rattles denoted
its age. lu tho svidost part the skin is
nine inches iu width, thus showing that
in life the rightful osvner of tho skin
which now adorns tho lady’s parlor
must havo been ail ugly custom -r. A
letter which preceded the j ro-cut states
that belts made of rattlcsuake skim uro
much worn by the young la lies of Tex -
a», and arc a common article of a belle’s
apparel .—Kansas City ’Times.
Petrified Fossils.
At Long Branch, Asbury Park and
Ocean G ove, N. J., layers of marl run
far cut into tho ocean. Oae of the beds
contains many pieces of petr.fied wood,
fossil teeth and casts from clam shells.
After all heavy storms the fosdU are
thrown upon the beach, Within the
last two months several remarkably fino
fossil shark teeth have been found. Ono
of them is perfect, more than four
inches-long and weighs half a pound.
Several fine specimens of fossil teeth of
the mailed sturgeon and th; devil fish
have been secured by curiosity hunters.
—Keie Joel' Sun.
QUAINT AND CURIOUS.
Twins aged njnsty years are living in
Wixom, Mich.
An autopsy on a Wisconsin man a
few slays ago revealed five jackknives
in his stomach.
In York County,. Ponn., a party of
tramps recently emitted a water tank
and converted it into a bedroom.
An Iowa girl, F.ora Loak, shot a man
dead for serenading her grandfather on
the occasion of his latest marriage.
A lump of nearly pure lead was re¬
cently taken out of tho ground near
Joplin, Mo. It weighed about 8000
pound 1 .
At AVilliamtport, Ml. is a maplo
tree that has a full crop of green leaves,
while every one of its neighbors is dry
and leafless.
A smart little Pcnnsylvaniagiil living
near tho Maryland lino has trapped
enough fur-benring animals to buy her¬
self a nice g aid watch.
In Sevier County, Ark., Nathan Can-
non, aged S3, undertook to kick a dog.
The dog dodged and Mr. Sevier was
jilcke 1 up with a broken leg and wrist.
With a record of having buried
1300 persons. George L. Moore, an aged
undertaker of Guthrieville, l’enn., has
at Inst been laid under tho soil him¬
self.
A thief stole a pair of shoes from a
policeman at Sedalia, Mo., tho other
night, and the ‘’cop’’didn’t even stop
snoring while tho thief was untying
them.
Marcel Bernier recently died at his
home at New Aukum Prairie, Washing¬
ton, aged 69. Ho was the. first white
child born in Washington, then Oregon
Territory.
Ono hundred and sixty-seven bears
were killed in Maine last year. The
State paid out $835. or $5 per head
bounty. Ove. $1000 ivas paid as bounty
for killing crows.
A meteor of great ill’uminating power
parsed over Forkston, Penn., the other
night, and in a minute thereafter a
heavy report was heard, and the earth
shook perceptibly.
At East Lyons, la., a goose died very
fsu ldealy. On cutting it open a silver
thimble was found in its throat. It is
thought the fosvl chuked to death while
trying to swallow it.
A petrified moccasin was unearthed
at Pendleton, Ore., by some laborers
who were digging fer the foundation
ot a bank budding. It was sent to the
Smithsonian Institution.
The belle at a recent dog fea?t on an
Indian reservation in Dakota wore a
jacket trimmed witdi teeth from 150
elks, which she herself had slain. She
is the granddaughter of the chief of the
tribe.
An espalier pear free at Pollet,
Fiance, was planted in 1589, and is
now tho oldest in Europe- It spreads
100 feet, its stem is three feet through,
and it still baars 3000 to 4000 pears
yeaiiy.
A petrified apple was discovered re¬
cently at Harrington, Me., by seme
boys. It had changed to the color of
marble. The stem and blossom were
apparently as perfoct as when the fruit
fell from the tree.
Shearing Geese.
A curioui esse came before an En¬
glish court lor adjudication recently,
says Galen Wilson, in the American Ag.
r culturist. A poulterer svas charged
svith cruelty to 48 live geese by pluck¬
ing them of their feathers, and tho own¬
er of the geese was charge l with procur¬
ing the commission of the offence. Tho
proceedings were taken by tho Society
for the Prevention of Cruelty to Ani¬
mals. A witness swore that “after the
geese were plucked their skins turned a
pm pie color aud they seemed to be in
pain. Thoy walked abiut with their
backs tip and shrank when touched.”
The practice was shown b/ defendants
to be very prevalent, aud the aocioty
asked for a nominal tine, to put a stop
to it. Tiio defendants said it was tho
custom of the district to pluck the
feathers every six sveeks, and it
they wore stopped from doing
so many people would discontinue
keeping gee'e, as much more money
5vas realized by the sale of tho feathers
than by tho gee e. The court imposed
a fi ic of eighteen shillings each upon
the defendants, and expressed the hope
that it svoiild bo’ a warning to other
people. Plucking live gsoie and ducks
prevails all over tHo United States. It
is a barbarous proceeding and the birds
are justified in “getting their backs up”
at the cruel practice. Should such cases
bo prosecuted, doubtless tile courts of
this country would decide as did the
' court in question. The e is a species of
large water-fowl whose habitat in win¬
ter is the open lakes of the interior, and
their feathers aro so firmly set that they
cannot be plucked. Shearing H re¬
sorted to, and many housewives have
beds made ®f those feathers which al¬
most equal those of eider down, as the
stiff, troublesome quill-ends aro absent.
Shearing geese aid ducks could be
made to supersede plucking.
Distant Relationship.
Stranger—“I notice your name is D;
Million. Are you related to the wealthy
Do Alii 1 ions, of New York?”
Poor but respectable De Million—“.
am a—a distant relation, sir.”
“Indeed! How distant?"
“Well, sir, as distant as they can
keep me, sir."—JVeic York Wee'ely.
Triokery.
Evcu in buying toilet soaps, said the
deafer, you arc not always sure thut you
good >ro getting the worth of your money. A
toilet article should not contain
lwore than from nine to eighteen per cent,
"f water. The unscrupulous manufac¬
turer increases the amount in various
ways.. In some instances lie forces water
into the soap as it hardens after the boil¬
mixes ing it undergoes; the by in other instances into he
water mechanical means
the soap; in a third and equally large class
class ot cases he introduces some powerful
chemical, enables such as Glauber’s salts, which
him to introduce as much ns sev¬
enty therefore, per cent, of water. It is obvious,
that ten pounds of honest toilet
soap would contain nine pounds if thor¬
oughly chemically dried, and that ten pounds treated
would contain less than three
pounds. Nor is tin: wrong coniincd to
selling innocent the three pounds for nine to the
is affected purchasers. by five The times spurious much soap
water as as
the genuine. In the wash-bowl or bath¬
tub it dissolves visibly before the eye.
Where it is honestly made rival can be
used fifty times, it only lasts ten. If left
by accident in the water, it dissolves until
the surrounding liquid is thick suds.
There are soaps of this sort in the market
which are advertised as first class and sold
at high prices. Have an eye on the man
who calls on you and pretends to give
you last bargains b saying it is the
of the lot, nd tempts you with a
quick-falling fume is there, scale of prices. The per¬
and the showy wrapper;
hut it is sixty per cent, water, instead of
honest soap.
A Spider-Web Telephone,
Agentleman was watching some spi-
dfejs, ffeot when it occurred to liim to try what
< the sound of a tuning fork would
have upon them, lie suspected that they
would take it for the buzzing of a fly.
He selected a large, ugly spider, that had
been feasting on flies for two months.
The spider was at one end of its web.
Sounding the fork, the man touched a
thread at the other side, and watched the
sound it'Suit. Mr. Spider had the buzzing
conveyed to him over his tele¬
phone wires, but bow was he to know on
which particular wire it was traveling?
He ran to the centre of the web very
quickly, and felt all around until he
touched the thread against the other end
of which the fork was sounding; then,
taking another thread along, just as a
man would take an extra piece of rope,
he ran out to the fork and sprang upon
it. Then he retreated a little way, and
looked at the fork. He was puzzled.
He had expected to find a buzzing fly.
He got on the fork again, and danced
with delight. Evidently the sound was
music to him.
Mere Flower Shows,
Nowadays, a house of mourning be¬
comes, on the day of the funeral, a sort
of floral exhibition. In many instances
the persons indulging in these displays
can florist ill-allord and undertaker the expense, as testify. the unpaid is
can It
well enough to have flowers a floral wreath or
cross, or a tew cut at a funeral.
Tlie other day I attended a funeral, and,
although the deceased was a poor laborer
tvho had worked for a dollar and a half a
day, the flowers covering his casket must
have cost over a hundred dollars. It
would have been better to have given bis
poor widow the money than spent it for
useless flowers. This is an evil that
should be remedied.
A Story Without End.
We are half a mind to begin to write a
story that may never end, founded on
facts that are obvious. in Hippodromus,
taking his morning walk the streets of
Lucignano, comes upon Theodeetes, a la¬
borer, and says to him: “Why are you
always at work ? ” Theodeetes answers:
4 ‘I am always at work strength to do get money to
buy food to give more work
that I may get more money to buy more
food to give more strength to do
work to get more to get more money to
buy more food to get more strength to
more work to get more money to buy—”
This is the beginning of the story
end, and the facts upon which it is found¬
ed—they are without end also.
You know, that if you had a bent tube,
.. one arm of which was the size of a
stem, and the other was big enough
. hold the ocean, water would stand at
| same height in one as in and the other.
' troversy equalizes fools wise men
the same way—and the fools know it.
s Hark! to the sound of humanity’s wails! with
Millions of people with aches ami
Headaches and humors, a merciless flood,
Weakness of lungs aud disorders of blood.
Yet there’s a helper that certainly saves,
Thousands of people from premature (.olden
, The remedy is Dr. Pierce’s
■ Discovery. cheeks bronchitis, It cures purifies coughs, the relieves blood,
without sores, eruptions rival and all unsightly the ills pimples spring and
a for that
a disordered liver. A11 druggists.
Don't hawk, and blow and spit, but use Dr
■Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. Of druggists.
Strange to say, the color that runs is not
fast color. What a curious language ours is ?
Watch for “Murray” Buggy adv. next
Prepare for Spring;
‘ Now is the time to attend to your personal condi¬
tion in preparation for the change to spring sea-
son. If you have not “wintered well,” if you are
tired out from overwork, if your blood has become
Impure from close confinement in badly ventilated
offices or shops, you should take Hood's Sarsaparilla
at once. It wiU purify and vitalise your blood,
create a good appetite, and give your whole system
i toue and strength.
“For a first-class spring medicine my wife and I
think very highly of Hood's Sarsaparilla. We both
took it last sprint. It did us a great deal of good
and we felt better through the hot weather than
ever before, it cured my wife of sick headache,
from which she has suffered a great deal, and re-
| Sieved me of a dizzy, tired feeling. I think every
ono ought to take something to purify the blood be-
; fore the hot weather comes on, and we shall cer.
talnly take Hood’s Sarsaparilla this spring.”—
■ -J. H. Pearce, Supt. Granite By. Co., Concord, N. F.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
■Told by all druggists. #1; six for |5. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
•a ’ MOTHERS
t; |?4 -jag* ^ ^
v 1 rjILI * aa ^
SSgBS* BOOK’ J 0 JHWP S \ > CHILD
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. ATLANTAna
solo by all artuGasrs.
HIM II mSSHSUttlt
■■■■ out pain. Book or par-
ATLANTA. Go. Ufflc. «)* WWtefc,n 8t
Queer Patents.
One of the most original patents Is hot an
automatic bath tub, which starts the
and cold water at a given moment in the
morning to which it has been set, main¬
tains exactly the right temperature of it
by graduating the flow of water, rings a
bell later, when all is ready, and, two minutes pillow
about suddenly and drops the him sleeper’s Among
a foot turns out.
other odd inventions are “chicken hop¬
ples,” which walk the chicken right scratch; out
of the garden when she tries to
“the bee moth excluder,” which auto¬
matically shuts up all the beehives when
the hens go to roost; “educational bal¬
loon,” a toy balloon with a map of the
world on its surface; side-hill nnnihila-
tors,”—stilts to tit on the down hill legs
of a horse when he is ploughing along a
side device hill; and drops of the “hen surpriser,” laid a
that the newly egg
through the bottom of the nest, with in¬
tent to beguile and wheedle tile hen into
at once laying another.
In a New Dress.
At a recent “fashionable event,” a lady
lost a diamond earring of grent value,
which could nowhere be found. There¬
fore, a gentleman who had just returned
from the East, professed his capability to
discover the missing link by means of an
Indian drug. Accordingly he asked all
the company to be seated, and after leav¬
ing the room he reappeared with a colored
glass bowl containing a liquid. He then
announced that he should ask all those
present to dip their lingers into the vessel,
and declared that should any one have
secreted the jewel for a joke, the jester’s
hand would be tinged with red. Every
one’s digits came out perfectly white, but
the earring was found at the bottom of
the bowl.
Let a man practice life is the in minor waiting! virtues. Let
How much of lost
him not make his fellow-crenturcs wait.
How many words and promises are prom¬
ises of conversation'. Let his be words
of fate.
IIow’s This t
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh Catarrh that cannot be cured by
taking F. J. Hall’s CHENEY & Cure. CO., Props., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him
perfectly honorable in all business transact¬
ions and' financially able to carry out any obli¬
gation made by their firm.
West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Tole-
Wadding, do, O. & Marvin, Wholesale
Kinnan
Druggists, Toledo, O. Toledo National
E. H. VanHoksen, Cashier ,
Batik, Toledo. 0.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, act¬
ing directly upon the blood and bottle. mucus surfaces Sold by
of the system. Price 75c. per
all Druggists.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Eye-Water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle.
No stranger should leave the city without a
box of “TansiU’s Punch” 5c. Cigars.
>
n 1
■m
m f y
>lP n sit
ONE ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup refreshing of Figs is taken; the it is pleasant and
and to taste, acts
gently Liver and yet promptly Bowels, cleanses on the Kidneys, the
effectually, dispels head¬ sys¬
tem colds,
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. of Syrup kind of Figs is the
only remedy its ever pro¬
duced, pleasing the stomach, to the taste and ac¬ in
ceptable its action to and truly beneficial prompt in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances,
its many excellent qualities com¬
mend it to all and have made it
the most popular Figs remedy is for sale known. in 50o
and Syrup bottles of by all leading drug¬
$1
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro¬
cure wishes it promptly it. for Do any not one accept who
to try
any substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL
lOUISmiE, KY. NEW YORK, N.Y.
Y.\\£s
OVi kV IggjSgJ
Old is HEfS
HAY-
FEVER
50 Cts.
COLD-HEAD ELY BROTHERS, f>6 Warren St., New York.
>
m P;
m
m i
&
gas-
1 w
i
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3 SHOE CENTLEMEN. FOR
BEST IN THE WORLD.
^CDhei^s^ecinlties ^ioi’^GENTDEMEN, LA-
None genuine miles is name and price are
stumped on bottom. Sold everywhere.
pr~Sen4 address on postal for valuable
information,
W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
naan for Double Breech-Loader
Hreffh-Londtrs, 94 to $f>0.
’vSBBB P lfr Wlnchcaler Rifles, fit 1o fl2.
Brefeh.loidlmj Rifle., $2.66 to $13.00.
8elf>e«eklng Reyolrers, Iflekel-pUt.d, $2.00.
Pend 2c. stamp for 60-pafto Catalogue and save 25 per cent.
(00 S"S PROFIT. fcinlty By $& sending dO names from vottr and
ana we wiir ship 6 cases
, a... - ___Dr. JLtrriWfc Yegetable Compound. Give
f-ole agency. Dr. Merrill. 385 Main St.. Boston. Mass.
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JEWELS AND LACES.
“ Oh, girl with the jewelled fingers,
Oh, maid with the laces rare !"
What are your jewels and what are your
laces worth to you if, from undergoing the
trying ordeals which fashionable society im¬
poses on its devotees, and which are enough
to test the physical strength and endurance
of the most robust, you break down, lose
your health and become a physical wreck,
as thousands do from such causes?
Under such circumstances you would
willingly give all your health. jewels and all your
laces to regain lost This you can do
if you wiU but resort to the use of that
great restorative known as Dr. Pierce’s Fa¬
vorite Prescription. Thousands of grateful
women bless the day it was made known to
them.
For weaknesses all those derangements, peculiar irregularities it is the
and to women,
only positive remedy, sold by frdm druggists, the manufact¬ under a
that guarantee satisfaction
urers, it will give in every
case, or money will be refunded. This guar¬
antee and faithfully has been carried printed on the for bottle-wrapper
out many years.
As an invigorating tonic, it imparts
Dr. Pierce’s Pellets regulate and cleanse the liver,
stomach and bowels. One a dose. Sold by druggists.
The Spirit of Sacrifice.
The spirit of sacrifice cannot be too.
highly valued. Its presence difference or absence
has always marked the be¬
tween the loving, sympathetic, generous
and heroic man, and the cruel, hard, sel¬
fish, and mercenery one. Human nature,
everywhere and always, bows in rever¬
ence before the spirit which inspires a
man to give up pleasure or advantage,
and accept pain or deprivation of himself. for some This
object or person outside
it is which has enabled the martyr to suffer
for defense his principle, of and the this hero it to die in
his country; is which
Supports and and makes possible of thousands the loving,
patient helpful lives endure of
men and women who hardship
in without joyful a devotion murmur, and spend good their lives
to some cause
which they have at heart or to some be¬
loved ones who are dearer to them than
their own private happiness.
I look upon a library as a kind of
mental chemist’s shop, filled with the
crystals of all forms and hues which have
come from the union of individual thought
with local circumstances or universal
principles.
— -----~— - -- f .......
A good conscience is to the soul what
health is to the body; it preserves a con¬
stant ease and serenity within us, and
more than countervails all the calamities
and afflictions which can possibly befall
us.
jBtrrlinaton i GOING NORTH
LfrfcJ OR-
ONE OF THE— WEST
—TAKE
BURLINGTON ROUTE
. -THROUGH TRAINS FROM-
ST. LOUIS AND CHICAGO
—TO— Denver, St.
Kansas City, and St. Joseph, Minneapolis.
Paul
The Best I.iue for all Points North nn,l
55 est and 1 the Pacific Coast.
CHEAP LANDS.
Along the Lines of the fCSSS Burlington Route in Ne-
awaiting settlement. These Lands are among the best
to be had anywhere in t he country for Agricultural-aud
Grazing purposes. For pamphlets and other matter,
giving location and fu 11 particulars, address any Agent
of the Burlington lioute or the undersigned.
A MAP OF THE UNITED STATES.
A large, handsome Map of the United States,
showing North and South Dakota, mounted and
suitable for office and home use, and issued by the
“Burlington Route.” ep^ionto will be furnished respon-
sib ,e parties Free on EJI
( 2 en’I Pass*. Agent Hurl hurt Louis, on Route, Mo.
H. R. TODD, St. Route,
CSen’I Agent Atlanta. Burlington Ga.
THE STAR -
FEED GRINDER
The Fastest and Cheapest
Grinder made. Grinds 15 to ’.*5
bushels per hour of Ear Corn
dry or dnmp* and all 6tnall
drain, write for circular.
^ New star Lexington, meg. CO., Ohio.
AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL CONSULT
! DR. LOBB
3‘2J> North Fifteenth 8 1„ Philadelphia, Skin Eruption!, Pa., for
1 the treatment of Blood Poisons,
I Nervous Complaints, Bright’s Disease, Strictures,
I j long Impotency and kindred from diseases, no matter originating, of how
i standing days medicines or furnished what cause by mail
taTTen CDEC llEXs
j 'lend, for Book on SPECIAL Disease!, r
CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH
“PMS j' S| Safe aad always reliable, Ladles, in
ask Druggist for Diamond Brand,
mt ** llic boxes, sealed with blue
^>tt#2ribbon. ^ in pasteboard Take boxes, no pink ether. All pills XTJF
dangerous counterfeits. wrappers, are
Send 4c. v
V* mall. Wit Name iKffiiSfc Paver. aswsys *
Chichester Chem’l Cs.. Hadison 8a,, I'hlla., Fa,
S| JONES
’ HE
'tW. T #LI»ESST-
Iron Levers, Steel Bearings. Brass
Tare Beam and Beam Box for.
m L I Every Scale. seo. For
y* mention size free price list
t-L ~ JONES this paper BINGHAMTON. and address
OF y.J
binghamto.n, n.
piSO’S REMEDY FOR CATARRH.—Best. Easiest to use.
a Cheapest. Relief is immediate. A cure is certain. For
Cold in the Head it has no equal.
.•
A A ?ir
» “mis? l “ the
a
strength worked, to "worn-out,” the whole “run-down,” system. For debili¬ over-
tated teachers, milliners, dressmakers,
seamstresses, nursing mothers, “shop-girls,” and feeble housekeepers,
women Prescription gen¬
erally, Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
is the greatest earthly boon, being and une¬
qualed as an appetizing cordial re¬
storative tonic.
As a soothing and strengthening unequaled nervine, and
“ Favorite Prescription ” is
is invaluable in allaying and subduing nerv¬
ous excitability, exhaustion, distressing, prostration,
hysteria, and other nervous
symptoms, commonly attendant Upon func¬
tional and organic disease. It induces re¬
freshing sleep and relieves mental anxiety
and despondency.
of An Illustrated and Book Her of Diseases, 160 pages, and treating their
“Woman
Self-cure,” sent sealed, in plain envelope,
on receipt of ten cents, in stamps.
Address, World’s Dispensart Medical
Association, No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo,
BUSINESS
COLLEGE,
IW 1 NASHVILLE, TENN.’
This College, though yet in its infancy,
has more than 600 former students occu¬
pying goesl positions, many of them re*
ceiving salaries ranging from $900 to $1«'-
500 per annum. For circulars, address
II. W. JENNINGS, Drill.
If you have a
COLD er
acute or leading to
CONSUMPTION,
scorn
EMULSIO
OF PURE COO LITER OIL
AND HYPOPHOSPHITES
OF LIME AND SODA
IS SURE CURE FOR IT.
This preparation contains the stimula¬
ting properties of -the Ili/pophosphitca
and fine Norwegian Cod Liver Oil. [J3ed
by physicians all the world over. It is as
palatable an milk. Three times as effica¬
cious as plain Cod Jsiver all Oil. A perfect
Emulsion, better than others made. For
all forms of Wasting Diseases, Bronchitis,
Scrofula, CONSUMPTION, antl Flesh Producer
as a
there is nothing like 8C0TT8 EMULSION.
It Is sold by all Druggists. Let no ono by
profuse explanation or impudent entreaty
induce you to accept a substitute.
f F YOU WISH * MSFi i ■ | -
BEYDER ifefskrijrl
purchase one of the cele-
brated SMITH & WESSON .
arms. The finest small arms JJ f)
ever manufactured and the \\ ifig
first Manufactured choice of In all calibres experts.
32,38 and 44-1(0. Sin- vSSS'
gle or double action, Safety Hammeriess and
Target wrought models. Constructed entirely inspected of best qual¬
manship ity stock, steel* they carefully unrivaled for work¬
durability ana and are Do be for finish*
accuracy. not deceived which by
cheap malleable for ciVstdTpn imitations
are often sold the genuine article and arc not
onlv unreliable, but dangerous. stamped The SMITH 8c
WESSON Revolvers are address all and upon the bar¬
rels with firm’s guaranteed name, dates of patents
and are perfect in every detail. In¬
sist upon having the genuine article, and address if your
dealer below cannot supply ybu an order sent attention. to
will receive prompt and careful
Descrptlvecatalogue photon, and prices furnished upon ap-
smith a wesson,
tyMcntion this paper, Springfield, Milan.
SHOW GASES
Wall and Proscription Cases, Cedar Chests, Barber
Furniture, Jewelry Trays, Stools. Cabinet work of all
kinds. Complete outfits for stores. Send for Catalogue.
ATLANTA SHOW CASE CO.,
ATLANTA, GrA.
COUTHERN PRINTERS’ SUPPLY CO.
V WE CARRY IN STOCK
Type, Cases, Stands, Presses,
I*aper Cutters
AND EVERYTHING USED IN A PRINTING OK
PUBLISHING HOUSE.
IWCall an 11 s and SAVE MONEY! -MM
34 West Alabama Street, ATLANTA, GA.
Farquhar'e Improved Cotton Planter
|a YeTjShn pic end Perfect Unrolled in Ub Operation; Seed Drop*
nsfflfiiSSKiib _ or FerttU-
>p.T with remarkable reg¬
•s|*c ularity In »nr
<i«l red am-
ount. it
1 the Cheapest, Reliable
J moat
’S&SS&sF ? .s 'and Best
PLANTER in exigence.
HEM) FOR CATALOGUE.
Address, A. B. FAUQUHAR. York, P*
uome II fsssss^ssssM-asssssffise
Bryant’s thoroughly College. taught 457 by Main MAIL. Circulars N. free. Y.
St., Buffalo.
OPIUM SHMfifiSLS;
pre ribe nni1 fnlly e f *
^^l^riFs'iU'raql do r B ihe'cei-taTn ’
’’•'I s^ecifit^iur g.h!!ngbaham,m. cure
CT »»»«»*>«*»■ " D., Y.
Amsterdam, N.
U Iffd only by the We have Bold Big G for
Ohio. M D. R. DYCHE & CO..
Chicago, HI.
Bold by Druggist!.
A. N. U........ 1890.