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FOB FAB * AND GAR BEN.
ECONOMIZING STRAW EOlt BEDDING. .
A few years ago fsrmors in grain¬
growing localities use! straw lavishly
for bedding, for tho purposo of making
the largest possible man uro plies. Now
she tcndoncy is to use as littlw straw
for bedding as is consistent with clean¬
liness. Cut straw mixed with ground
grain makes a valuable feod, tho straw
furnishing carbonacoous matter, and
the meal giving tho elements that mako
muscle and growth. If corn-meal is
si-od it should be mixed with ground
oats or wheat bran to make a good
feeding ration.
DRAPE VINES ON HEAVY SOILS.
The old idea that grapes thrive best
on light land is mainly dho to tho fact
that such soils are naturally dry. While
n heavy clay it not best for the grape,
it is no insupcr.ibh obstacle lo tuccess
in vineynrding, providing it is thor¬
oughly underdrained. In fact, grape¬
growing is possiblo under a wider range
of conditions and soil than is tho case
with any other CTop. The one thing
that grapo roots cannot abide is slag-
uant wat-r. No matte-’ if this dries
cut in pidsummer it is then past the
power of the vine to regain lost time.
Lsnd thoroughly drained to tho depth
of threa feet warms moro quickly in
spring, ajid makes a difference in tem¬
perature of live to ten degrees or more
atthetimi when the vino most needs
warmth. —A mrrican Cultiva lor.
marketing fowls.
Before-marketing surplus fowls fatten
them. Tnis is best done by inclosing
in a small yard where they can obtain
little excicue, and feeding liberally
with mixed grain, corn, oats and wheat,
with occasional ration ofboiled potatoes
or other vegetables, chopped apples,etc.
B it right here is whero tho greatest
caution must be exercised, or you will
kilt the entire lot in less than a week.
When a fowl is boing fattened, re me in-
her that it must have plenty of coarsc
gravel, bro.on crockery or glass to en¬
able it to grind the increased quantity
of food you give it. And nbo it must
have abuadancs of pure wn'er. With
a sulli ioncy of these requisites, and a
variety of food, a fowl will fatten nico-
’ly in ab >ut two weeks, aid will then
sell for the (op price, while a common
skinny cull will not fetch enough to
pay for catching it. — Tha Erxminer.
SALT FOR COWS
If cows wero forced to cat salt by it
being put into their food, it might do
Iheni harm, hut it is extremely doubtful
if cows will cat too much salt if they
arc allowc l free access to it and freo
choice lo take it or not. Salt, being
an apparent nee 1 for the system, will
help to keep the animal healthy. T.iis
will increase the fl iw of milk nnd im¬
prove the quality. It is believed that
salt will do this directly, and that its
use. will improve (ho churning quality
of the milk. But ta.t should he given
regularly. If not, there will be suitir-
tng—at one time from lack of it, and
at another lime from excosi of it. Pro-
vide rock salt, and havo a place for it,
where tho cows can always go to it.
Put a (rough in the yard, or a box in
the side of a building (with a rool) or a
box under the ca tlo shed. — Massachu-
xt's Pi< te nan.
CARE OK COLTS.
They are olten fed nothing but hay
through winter, nnd sometimes (hat of
a poor quality. Tliii is miserable
policy, and the remit is tho coil’s
growth is nearly stopped, and what
lit! Io takes placa is uneven, Tho
medium-sis id colt should be fed for
tho first two or three mouths after
wcaniag time one quart of oats mixed
with the saiio q umtity of wheat bran
and a gill o; oihnral morning and
night- Tho bran, aside from being
nutritious, tends to keep the colt froc
wtrms, whilo the oats are excel¬
lent lo make superior rnusclj and form
a goo I quality of bones. Tho oilmeal
nils digestion nnd keeps tho bowels in
order. As tho winter advances this
rn ii.n m y bo gradually increased <o
ouc-half mere, or perhap be douMod
by March or ApriL Tho stabie of the
co t siiouid have an earth floor, as
stand ug on boirls or an; hard sub-
► taico is itij irious t.> the foet and
ankles, they having not yet hccomo
solid and film, aid it ften engenders
tir. 4 bone. Ho o, g it to be turned out
i-iin a dr/ yard every p c .sent day for
exercise; this is absolutely necessary to
•cento a good, even growth of bone
and muscle.— A'eto York Tribune.
TUE GOOD in COTTON SEED.
Feeling a desire to test the q mlities
of cotton seed mca! as to its nulk aud
butter-producing qudities, I purchased
one-balf toi f mea’. in the month of
March. Before feeding any meal tho
milk was carefully weighed, after being
drawn from the cows, for one week.
Thtp the cows were cffereJ some cotton
seed mea! with their other chop, but
soon they bccamh fond of it and would
eat it by itself. They were fed for two
weeks before the milk was weighed.
The third weok they were fed ono quart
morning and cveniig (this is full ra¬
tions) along with their regular rations
of grain, which resulted ia the folliw-
Ing: Number of pounds of milk ob¬
tained when no cotton seed meal was
fed, 945. Number of pounds of milk
obtained when cotton seed meal was
fed. 1367. Gaia in favor of cotton
:ce: meal, 122. The number of pounds
of butter mado from the first test was
88; from the second tost, 51. Gain of
13. The cotton seed meal cost mo $26
per ton dalivorod, Tha clear gain on
one ton of cotton seed meal woull bo
$14.03, bosides the decided improve¬
ment in tho coats of tho cows and lay¬
ing on flish. The butler was improvol
in quality, being sold when taken from
the churn. Tho meal is estimate! to
bo worth $22 as a fertilizer. —American
Dairyman.
WINTER EFFECTS OF UNDER-DR A IN AGE.
Some of tho minor advantages of un-
der-drainago assume great importance
in winter. It is quite apparent upon
observation that ground properly under-
drained heavet much tho less in
winter. It is the expansion of tho
wutcr in tho soil, at the moment of
tree/, ng, that heaves the soil. Dry
earth does not expand at any fempora-
turc. Draining protects the soil against
an excess of water, aid there is no ex.
cess of moisture, only capillary and hy¬
groscopic moisture, to ba expanded by
freezing. Tho effect of the expansion
of these is cimparativily slight. This
partly explains why, other things be¬
ing equal, winter wheat succeeds best
on under.drained ground. Under-
drainago oftcu prevents damage to the
wheat yet another way. Not infre¬
quently wuter stands on the surface of
flat laud, freezes into ice, and smothers
tho wheat. It is rare that an entire
field is so damaged, yet sometimes largo
fields are altogether killed out in this
way. But damage to patches, ovor
which the water collects, is quite fre¬
quent. Under-drainage, which usually
disposes of surface- water, prevents
smothering tho wheat.
There arc several material advantages
in the winter spreading of stable manure
and some other fertilizers. A roipocta-
b!e minority, if not an ac'.ual maj >rity,
of farmer) woull find such handling of
manure the best, provided the loss from
the flow of surface water could be
avoi led. Under - drainage at least
largely reduces tliis fl>w; it carries the
water through instead of over tho soil.
Tho water, on its way to (ho under¬
drains, clilies tho manure into the soil,
where it is filtered out, instead of car¬
rying it away. The water does not
carry away so much of the soil or form
so many gullies, something the farmers
will surely appreciate whenever there is
a thaw during tho winter, and es¬
pecially during tho spring .—American
Agriculturist.
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES
Liok for quality, then pedigree, in
sir03.
Do heavy teaming duriug good sled-
ding.
In pig raising early maturity is fat
preferable to siz j.
No animal will do well if it standi
Qua cold, wet floor.
See (bat ynur sheep are well sheltered
from cold and storms.
In giving salt to poultry mix it
thoroughly with tho food.
Corn marketed iu the form of fat
pork usually pays the best.
Now protect Ihoso young trees nnd,
vines you set out last soasou.
lloTsei generally prefer cold water,
bat it sboull bo clean and sweet.
Low jiricos and cheap production
must be mado to go baud in hand.
Assort your seeds, and mako a list ol
what you lack for spring planting.
Farmers should emb togethor in
breaking roads and keeping thorn open.
0ootl stock, good care aid good
shelter uro essentials in poultry keep¬
ing.
If you notice l a break in tho machin¬
ery when you put it away, now is the
timo lo repair it.
The nearer you are to a good market,
tho more likely is market gardening to
prove profi.abie.
t In planning for cropi remember that
moro men fail by trying to cultivate too
much land than too little.
Cu n'is excellent for o'.d hogs in tha
last stages of preparation for the butch¬
er, but a starving diet for pigs.
Those squealing pigs would make
loss * chin music” if they had plenty to
eat, and a dry, warm nest to lio in.
Moro work on loss land, and more
product for tho amount of work wed
doue, must be the rule of the future.
While you aio about it you may as
well raise u good animat as a poor OI1J.
It costs nn moro aad pays much hotter
than u scrub.
Look first at the individual auimal,
nnd tlion at tho pedigree; if both are
satisfactory you can snfely proceed to
buy or brood.
Authorship in New York.
The number of poets, authors, dram¬
atists, j ui cal sts and literary charac
ters of all description!. that throng in
New- York is extremely laige. They
are found In the most miserable garrets,
as well as in the gilded saloons of spa¬
cious hotels. Thousands of men nud
women dopenl for their daily bread on
the theatres, the publishers, the book¬
sellers and the newspapers, The city
swarms with scribblers of indifferent
merit, authors of well-founded preten¬
sions, editors, stenographer), translat¬
ors, compilers and correctors of works,
correspondents of journals and periodi¬
cals, etc., etc. Literary hermits are
rare. The reader naturally inquires,
"How do they all obtain employment
and bread?’’ ami tiie question rt-muiu?
unanswered.— 2i. F. Tribune.
QUAINT AND CURIOUS.
There are only three newspapers pub-
llshed in China.
A sheet of cork one pound in weight
will support the body of a man in
water.
Tho other day a bear loft one of his
paws in a stoel trap near Holiidaysburg,
Penn.
It requires twenty-two volumes tr.
register the different cattlo krnnds of
Arizona.
Over 2,000,000 quinine pills, weigh¬
ing about a ton, have been Consumed
by tho pcop c of Boston in ten days.
Tho Heading railroad company has
issued nn order requiring all its uni¬
formed employes to keep their coats
button od.
Tho women of Milford, Mo., have
presented to the town a hall which (hoy
paid for themselves by giving ontertniu-
ments and fairs.
It is said lhat one of tho English nov.
elists is able to repeat fron memory
every word ho has writtcu, aad ho is
the author of many books.
Fiancis Christian of Muskegon, Mich.,
is 100 years old. His mother live ! to
be one hundred and four, on 1 ho lias a
cousin who is now iu his one hundred:h
year.
A woman of Ionia, Mich., suffered
with a pain iu her side for twenty years.
Tho other day a physician removed u
needle that is supposed to havo caused
all the trouble.
A butcher of Coblcntz, in Germany,
recently discovered in the entrails of
ahull hs lmd killo.i a gold ring bear¬
ing the inscription: “Napoleon III.,
Emperor, 1862.”
The longest tunnels in the world are:
St. Gothard(tho longest of a'l), 48,843
feet; MountG.Ris, 39 830; Hoosack,
25,080; Severn, 22,992; NochistSQgs,
21,659; Butro, 21,120.
A farmer living between Marcelino
and Brookfield, Mo., found thirty-seven
bee trees during the summer and fall,
$nd ns a couscquinco has on hand moro
than a barrel of strained honey.
There is a quecrly matched couple m
Atlanta, Ga. Tho husband weighs 130
pounds and the wife 330 pounds.
When they were married the man
weighed 150 pounds and the woman
120 .
In the stock yards at Kansas City,
Mo., a muie and a horse engaged ia a
kicking match, and tho mulo was out-
kicked. The attendants had to turn
the lioso on the combatants in order to
separate them.
Born and raised in a Cixiuese tca-
drfnking establishment, a Chinaman iu
Philadelphia says the ouly way to make
tea is to p >ur the boiling water on the
leaves, stirring them briskly at the same
time. It should be served after allow¬
ing merely time lo settle, Tub wholo
operation takes only a minute.
While the cropi on the Itieker farm,
in East Nittany Valley, Penn., were
being thrasho l, a chicken was found
under the sheaves of wheat in one of
the mows where it had been since the
grain* was placed there—on the 15th
day of July. The chicken had live 1
all that time without food or water, and
weighed when it was found considera¬
bly less than one pound, though still
alive.
The Caribou.
Tho caribou hai very wide, heavy
horns, and they are almost always cir¬
cular—that is, tho main part or trunk
of each horn carve* outward from the
skull and then iuward toward the point,
in an almost (rue semicircle. They are
more or less branched, but both tho gener¬
al shape of the whole horns and of tho
branches is such when the hpnd is
thrown up and buck they aid the ani¬
mal’s flight by presenting what may be
cilied the point of a wedge toward the
saplings and limbi and small forest
growths through which the beast rum,
partiug and spreading every pair of ob¬
stacles to either sid'J, and bending every
single one out of tho way of bis flying
body. The caribou of North America
is the roindjjr of Greenland; the dif¬
ferences between the tw-o arc very
slig.it. The animal’s home is iu tho
aictic circle,but iu America it feeds and
rooms farther south than in Europe aud
Asia. It is a large and clumsy-1 ook iug
beast, with thick aud rather short
legi and bulky body, and, SCCD
in repose, gives uo hint of its rapacity
for fight. Yet tho caribou can urn
“like a streak of wind,” and makes its
way through leaves aad brush and brit¬
tle, sapiless vegetation with a modicum
of noise so slight as to seem inexplica¬
ble. Nature has ingeniously added to
its armament, always ouo, aud usually
two, palmated spurs at tho root of its
horu=, aid theso grow at an obtuso
angle with tho head, upward nnd out¬
ward toward the nose. "With those
spurs—lise shoves used sideways—
the caribou roots u;> the snow, or
breaks its crust and disperses it, to get
at his food on the ground, Tho car-
ibou aro very large deer, and their-
strength is attested by the weight of
their horns. I have handled caribou
horns in Canada that I could not hold
out with both hands when seated in a
chair. It seemi hard to believe that an
animal of tho size of a caribou could
carry a burden apparently sodispropor-
tioned to his head aad nsek. Bat it is
still more difficult to bolicvo, a s all the
woodsmen say, that these horns are
dropped nnd new ones grown every
year.
The Other Bide,
The posno-eor of tact always lias bis
wits about him, and never runs the risk
of giving ofTenso, no matter how pachy¬
dermatous his Companions may be. Few
people unduly really enjoy being told that they
arc palo or red, thin well or stout; so,
looking) umojs you can say. “How you are
’ it were better to make no per-
s >! al remark on the appearance of your
friend. Never tell a lady who has oh a
particular y becoming gown or bonnet
that she looks ten years’younger in that
Uran in any iking you h'dve seen her wear,
that is at best nuta dubious compliment,
lou mean it to bo fiatteiing, but it is
equivalent to saying, “All your other
gowns old.’ are No unbecoming and make you look
woman wants one garment
praised at the expense of everv other that
she possesses. Don’t tell her, either, that
it m the most becoming thing you have
ever seen her wear. That is an impeach¬
ment to her t trie heretofore, though you
probably should may have no such thought. If
you notice a bit of black court
plaster on a friend’s cheek, don’t try to be
witty by pointing to it and asking him if
he has been lighting; he knows it is
there, certainly, or it would not bo there,
hence it is superfluous a-> well as offensive
to speak of it. Whatever pertains to
one’s toilet is of a strictly private nature,
and termeddle! the well-bred stranger or friend in¬
h hot. When elderly persons
arc present, don’t tell how you dread and
hale the thought of old age. Never,
when in mixed company, introduce sub¬
jects of conversation that might p rove
offensive to ordinarily sensitive people; ns
for the rest, by conscientiously observing
the politeness which comes from the
heart, even the hyper-sensitive are com¬
yond paratively safe in your presence, and be¬
the danger of receiving any serious
offense.
In Oklahoma.
Base ball nines have already been estab¬
lished, and that portion of the people who
gamble on everything attend the mutch
games for tho purpose of betting. Bets
are made not only on the result, but on
the every play. Such cries as “Five • dollars
next bull’s strike,” “Five dollars he
strikes out,” “Five dollais he don’t hit
t,” are heard continually, and there
seems as offer. many One ready day to accept as there
are to a horse ran away
at Guthrie, with a young boy on its back.
The youngster looked tho picture of
misery, and the horse commenced to act
wildly. “Bet you ten dollars he throws
the kid,” remarked one by-stunder to
another. “I’ll go you,” was the prompt
response, at d at that moment the horse
got its back into a graceful curve, bunked
iu regulation Texas style, and the boy
was rolling paid, in the sand. The bet was
promptly ceeded and the gamblers pro¬
to a joint for drinks.
Tho Population of China.
There are eighteen provinces in China
proper, and the total population of the
empire is set down by the best informed
authority on the s ibject, M. Popoff, of
the Russian legation in Pekin, at not
far short of three hundred and ninety
million, a population more than equal to
that of Europe. To these province®—
islands leaving out Manchuria, Corea, and the
j U of UI Formosa lm anci mid Hainan—there Hainan—tneie
are only , seventeen , ,, ‘open ’ or treaty ports
where foreign ships are allowed to enter
and European merchants are permitted to
establish themselves. Thus, with a coast
line of over three thousand miles, there
are but seventeen ports for foreigners to
trade with nearly four million of a popu-
lation. .
That whifft we are we shall teach, not
voluntarily, but minds in voluntarily. 1 noughts j
como into our by avenues which
never , let t open, and -i thoughts a i , , go out. ,
we >
of our minds through avenues which we {
never voluntarily opened, Character
teaches over our heads.
Superstition itself records too vainer
reliance than the trust in intellectual cul-
ture as an adequate antagonist or* control- which '
ler to the passions and impulses
are dynamics of pur nature, and in their
adjustment constitute character. t
_._
A Woman in the f a**:.
There always woman’s is. She is the povferbehind the the
throne. A influence «ver wield mac ,
who loves her is often absolute. To herri so
great a power to guide, strengthen slaetjd bn nod clear help and
husband, a woman’s mind ; j
liealthy. It cannot be if she is sufiftring from
any functional derangement. Hew many would a.
homo is made unhappy becuuse who
be its life mid light is a wxatchefl. depressed, dough-
morbid invalid! Wives, miVhera cud
tors, why suffer from “female complaints”
which are sapning your lives away, when Dr.
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription will renew your
health and gladden those about you? It has
restored happiness to many a sAldened life,
Why endure martyrdom when relenso is sf
easy? restorative In its like special the “Favorite field there Presftrjptfon.” never was a
To cleanse the stomach, liver, and system
generally, use Dr. Pierce’s Pellets. 25 cents.
Only by slow and painful degre es can the we
fight our way upward and break lotfse from
dinging hold or self-love.
I know' the composition of, and have pre¬
scribed Bull’s Sarsaparilla, and bedieve it nn
excillent preparation for producing an altera¬
tive effect upon the system. I ooufiider it the
best article of Sarsaparilla in use.
A few electric volts wouldn’t hurt our mil¬
lionaires. They need light.
y s
|
fcf
Are the best months in which to purify your blood.,
for at uo other season does tue system so much
neo.l the aid of a reliab.e mcdisine like Hood’®
Sarsaparilla, as now. During: the long, cold winter
the. blood becomes thin and impure, the body be
■ comes weak and tired, the appetite may be lost,
Hood’s Sarsararilia is peculiarly adapted to purify
and enrich ilie blood, to create a good appetite and*
overconn* that tired feeling. It has a larger
itaan any other sarsaparilla or blood purifier, and
it increases in popularity every year, for it is the
ideal
Spring fiffedieine
•Early last -'prin^I w as very muoh run down.
had nervous headache, felt miserable and all that,
Iwasverymuci benefited by Hood’s Sarsaparilla
and recommend it to my friends."— Mrs. J. M.
Taylor, 1119 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, O.
“Hood’s Sarsapa ilia has cured me of salt,
rheum, which I have bad for years. I do think
it is a splendid me Heine. I am 40 years t5f age
and my skin is Just as smooth and fair as a piece
of gla.;-s. 1 have sl£ children, and when anyth ng is
the trouble with them tne first thing I go for is
Hood’s Sarsaparilla,."—Mas. Lilla Clark, South
Korwalk, Conn.
Hood s
Eold by all dru?glsts. $1; six tor $5. Prepared oaty
by C. I. HOOD & CO.. Lowell. Mali.
IOO Doses One Dollar
ELY’S CREAM BALM
GIVES iflblJTEF AT ONCE FObj
COLD IN HEAD.
—C'UltES—
CATARRH.
Apply Balm into each nuatri*.
KLY BROS.,38 Warren Sr., N. Y
61 HvinEi flllS? WUI>Y. Penmanship, Book-keeping, Business Forma,
18 thoroughly Arithmetic, by MAIL. Short-hand, Circular® free. etc.,
teiigM Bufiaio, N. Y
Bryant's Coiicfe, 4^7 Main St,
Goap stone and Its Uiw.
A writer in a London journal calla at¬
tention to the unappreciated uses and
preservative terial, he qualities of soapstone, what a ma¬
says, which possesses may
bo regarded as extraordinary qualities in
those withstanding especially atmospheric' which have much influences, to do
so
with the corrosion of iron ahd steel, and
from experiments made it is said that no
other material is capable of taking hold of
the fibre of iron and steel so readily and
firmly as this. In China soapstone is
buiit largely of used for preserving structures liable
sandstone and other stones
to crumble from the effocts of the atmos¬
phere; and tho covering with powdered
soapstone in the form of paint on some
obelisks in that country, c imposed of
stone liable to atmospheric deterioration,
has been the means of preserving them
intact for hundreds of years.
An Extinct Volcano.
An extinot volcano has been discovered
in Connecticut, near Meriden, The ash
bed is an overhanging cliff about twenty*
five feet high and fifty feet long and of a
greenish occasional tldgo. On the face of the crystals, cliff
are pockets of quart*
some of which Another shade to amethyst of and the
some to rose. feature
cliff is tiie prevalence of roundish stones,
varying These from one to four feet in geological diaraetor.
were the bombs, in
parlance, and were portions of the Irap
rock which were ejected from the Active
volcano. A small portion of the sand¬
stone bed is twisted and contorted by the
action of heat and pressure.
The Jettm-non Davie Monument,
Sacliary After tWn Taylor, Ixittlb of lluena daughter Vista, married (ien.ral Jef-
whose
fersdn Davis against her fa lier’s wish, is Davis: said
to have remarked to tha tnen Colonel
“Co mid, you have saved the dail. Go I bless y iu.’
li lien Do tin would luive you, she was a better
Judge of a man than I w is." Undoubtedly and
those w oyds of t he bluff old Mexican In¬
dian fighter express the feeling of every native
southern family* towards the man whoso whole
life is so interwoven with their history', that
they can wellsay, wo are the best judges of the
man’s worth. An d whether a public monu-
meat is ever raised to his memory or not,
every southern family should Have a monu¬
ment of him all their own, in the form of a
good Portrait for framing. We have just re¬
ceived H Custom from tho House publishers, Huston. I. S. Johnson Mass., *
t!o., likeness street, of Jefferson Davis, a
very line por.rait
aitn autograph signature. The publishers as-
tureus D o males for it were engraved for
them by one of tne most nnd » nous houses in
America. The size is )2xlG. has every n 11 -
peai ance of an exquisite Sepia Etching. It is
suitable library for framing to The hang publishers in any parlor or
in • Ur land. propose
placing the portraits f>T sale in the handset
every druggist and general storekeeper !h the
South, so that people can conveniently If get he
them. Ask your neatest dealer for one.
lias no! got them, urge him to write Johnson
& (in., as above aoout them; or, the publi-hsrs aid
will semi one to any address post' on Write re¬
ceipt by them of £5 cents in stamps.
y our name, yostofUee and State plainly.
The great difficulty about advice is the pre¬
dominance of quantity over quality.
Tourists*
Whether on pleasure bent or business, should
take on every trip a bottle of Syrup of Figs,
as it acts most pleasantly and effectually on
the kidneys, liver and bowels, preventing fe¬
vers, headaches and other forms of sickness. For
sale in 60c and $1.00 bottles by all leading drug¬
gists.
We build barriers against the flood tide; we
should place some restraints to all prosperity.
Bo.l. „ and , Garb.nclc „ ,
, bolls, M seems carbuncles, strange etc., that when anyone Dr. will Bull's suiter Sarsa- with
pal-ilia will certainly It prevent all such antidote eruptive
is a sure and safe for
its°u6e°wSen''neerfed^touldnot* beimncce£
sarily delayed. Thousands who found exten-
no
^a^scrXlous^pt^^di^a^the' Bull’s Sarsaparilla is an exception, and that
skin becomes clear and free from pimples, the
digestion is improved, aches and pains cease,
tendencies disappear, the power of endurance
is increased, weakness, dizzy spells and unnatu-
ral fatigue vanish, in a word the user of Dr.
Bull’s Sarsaparilla becomes a picture of good
health and strength. Try It. Use no other.—
jM!,t " u
_
Thu life of man consists not in seeing visions
hud and willing dreaming servioe. dreams, but In active charity
Deafness Can’t Be Cured.
by local application, for they can not reach the
diseased portion of the ear. There is only one
Jg
flamed condition of the mucus lining of the
Eustachean Tube. When this tube gets inflam¬
ed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect
healing, is the and result, when and it is unless entirely the inflammation closed Deaf-
nesss
can be taken out and this tube restored to its
normal condition, nine hearing of will be destroyed
forever; catarrh, which oases ont but ten are caused by
is nothing an inflamed con-
dition of the mucus surfaces,
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any
case of Deafness :caused by Catarrh) that we
can not cure by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure,
Bend lor circulars, free.
F.J. CHENET . & OO., _ Toledo, O.
i “ Sold by Druggists 76c.
----
God is a shower to the heart burned up with
grief; Uodis a sun to the face deluged with
tears.
*
M lie" think .. . , children . ... have
ask your Vpu druggist fpr your Dr. Bull’s Worm Destroy¬ worms,
ers and do not take any other. They taste good
are always sure.
Erie Kail way.
This pin uilar Eastern Line is running solid
vestibules! trains, consisting of beautiful day
coaches, Pullman sleeping Chicago, and New dining cars,
between Cincinnati, York and
Boston. All trains run via Lake Chautauqua hold!
during the reason, privileged and passengers this ug
through world-famed t iokets are Be to stop tickets off at
resort. sure your read
via N. Y.. L. E. & W. li. It,
iiieh, fragrant, line, “Tansill’s Punch.’’
j Hood’s Sarsaparilla is preoared from Sarsapa-
. rilla. Dandelion, Mandrake, Dock, Juniper Berries
I and other well-known vegetable remedies, in such
| a peculiar manner as to derive the full medicinal
value of each. It will cure, when in the power of
medicine, serofula, salt rheum, sores, bolls, pim-
pies, all humors, dyspepsia, biliousness, sick head-
ache, indigestion, general debility, catarrh, rheu-
mafcism, kidney and liver complaints. It over-
( comes that extreme tired feeling caused by change
1 of climate,
season or life, and imparts life and
strength io the whole system.
Blood Poison
“For yearB at irregular intervals in all seasons, I
j | suffered b.ood poisoning the intolerable by burning and itching of
ivy. Ifc would break out on my
legs, iu my throat and eyes. Last spring I took
Hood’s Sarsaparilla ns a blood purifier, with no
thought of it as a special remedy for ivy poisoning,
but it has effected a permanent and thorough cure."
r—C alvin* T. Schttte, Wentworth, X. H.
“I had boils all over my neok and back, troubling
toe so much that I could not turn my head around
nor stoop over. Hood’s Sarsaparilla cured mo in
two weeis. I think it Is the best blood pur-iller.
Dajoel Rsad, Kansas City, Mo.
I Sold by all druggists. At; six for $5. Prepared only
[ by C. I. HOOD ft CO., Lowell. Mass.
1 OO Doses One Dollar
bw fop. Double Breech-Loader
HrPFcb-toJUjer*, $4 to $ BO.
Wlitfhp.lor 15-«hot Klflr**. $11 1o $18.
Brrerb-hmr.lag Rifle*, $2.Ci to $1S.OO.
Srif-coeking &U-pare KcTolTor*. Nlckpl-plstfd, 25 $2.00.
fG*nd2e. stamp Tor Catalogue and *ave per tnt.
GRIFFITH a SIM PLE, B12 W. Main, Lou isville. Ky.
Bll E« l?/ I Known Dr ' TKASK’S 60 .lU.netleOlntm.iiT
CURED over years. !&. Druggist* &&« keep It,
1
kagflll It <
’ll'?
rj
zn r\\ I
IV I
•* ( it' a-
5 /
IS \* . . , **>• m*
V
m
“--- “>
i vQ
“IWILL FIGHT IT OUT ON THIS LINE IF IT TAKES
ALL SUMMER.”
The bull-dog is not an animal to be
admired, yet he possesses one trait that
at least entitles him to our respect.
His tenacity of purpose is proverbial.
It makes him a formidable adversary.
A like trait has often enabled man to
overcome great obstacles and win vic¬
tory under the most trying circum-
"stances. In fact, it is only by tenacity
of purpose and indomitable will-power,
that many of life’s battles are brought
to a successful termination.
Disease, like man’s more material
enemies, is often an obstinate adver¬
sary, termined and it is only by the most of the de¬
persistency in the use
best remedy that victory is attained
over it. While Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med-
ical Discoverv is guaranteed to benefit
or cure in, all diseases for which it is
recommended, yet iu ailments of slow long
standing, inception which are usually alike
in their and progress, the cure
must likewise be effected by slow de-
and regular ‘ Tltil
grees staep;?, can
m ^5QO the proprietors of DR. SAGE’S ffir^ineurabte^ CATARRH REMEDY. of
falling SYMPTOMS OF CATARRH.—Headache, sometimes profuse, obstruction and acrid, of at nose, others, discharges thick,
into throat, watery,
tenacious, mucous, deafness purulent, offensive bloody, bfeattU putrid Striell ana offensive; taste .impaired- eyes weak, ring¬
Mi* ing ernl in debility. cars, Only t fetv of these symptoms nnd likeiy to be present a^id at once: geg-
a
Dr. Sage's Remedy cures the worst cases. Only 50 cents. Sold by druggists, everywhere.
SEVEN SEVENTEEN (SEVENTY
Us >
v>
Use the SMALL STZE (40 little beans to the bot-
tie). They are the most nofiVOhient: suit all ages.
Price of either slip. 20 cents per buttle.
BC§Sl§!?yC ^ at panel ^■ size 17, of 70: this Photo-gravure, picture for 4
cents (coppers or stamps).
3. F. SMITH h CO.,
Mafcera of * 'Bile Beans. ’ 1 St Louis, Mo.
STEVENS PATENT, IMPROVED
Unequalect far
Durability afVci
Accuracy.
t
SEND FOR
Catalogue.
J. P. STEVENS & BRO.,
iYtlnnta,
|U3^combining5a8tidusB Mii&Or FU RNITURE. «.
f*N V,ALI D w^ B
AND 'tea
AWHEEL CHAIRS]# \£
and
logue. Bond 6t*mp P<'time lor goods data- desirecC\ Vxili, 2~\z. /l VS) K ,T!’ r , . ,‘np, ”
JS-bTSth iifi l>UI.5i. ivi ltv
UU11URK 3IFG. CO., 1 St.. ka.
AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL
COgjULTDK. I film, 3‘29 A or th Fifteenth,
street, Su special Philadelphia. diseases; Twenty years’ experience
cures the worst cases of Net vous
Complaints, Pile Blood Poisoning’, Blotches,..Eruptions,
Dcsp , Catarrh, Ulcers, Sores, Impaired Memory,
ndency, Dimness of Vision, Lung, Liver,
fctomach, Kidney Bright’s Disease); confidential.
tT$"Cail or write for question list aud book.
opium seas
^^1
i £ 13 /f
!/Ws
u.
ri* >JKS W&Ssffk 58 * h
M DR. SOHENCK’S P Ill
DEI. SCHENCK’S andmke ills DR. SGHENCK ’9
7
Is a Positive Cure for
DYSPEPSIA
And . , nil „ Disorder,
of the Dl-
geetivoOrgans. Itisllkewise
» Corroborative or Strength-
SS with'bene’flUn
tie. Dr. Schenck s New Book
00 'j 1 8 ’ k* ver nnd Stonjach
msiled zi # free. Address,
Dr. J.H. Schenck & Son. Phlla.
¥ji~ oar
Best Cough Medicine. Recommended by Physicians.
Cures where all else fails. Pleasant and agreeable to the
taste. Children take it without objection. By druggists.
WITS
"MURRAY” $55.95 BUGGiES ifi $5.95 HARNESS
THE BEST IN THE WORLDI JL j THE BEST IN THE WORLD
! J* KxL B7/ More Harness “Murray’' sold last year Bugrgies than any and
for us. We stand on our own HI other two makes Combined,
goods fdoting, solely and sell their the “ Murray world-re- ” \I which proves that their superior
nowned merits on and low prices. Vi, j Vjx v) qualities are appreciated.
isv or t::k UAKurAcrusiRS ahd saw riir akssvs am. middi.vvas COCINCtNNATI.O. s itofits.
Write for cataloeu. «nJ Net Cash Prlres, WILBER H. MURRA/ Mr G
only be accomplished by remedy a persistent tot
use of this wonderful ft
reasonable length'of time. When so
used, it conquers the worst cases of
Salt-rheum, Eczema, Tetter, Erysipe¬ of
las, Scalp diseases, and all manner
blood-taints, no matter of how long
standing, or from whatever cause affections, they
have arisen. All Scrofulous
as Old Sores, or Ulcers, White Swell¬
ings, Hip - joint Disease, Enlarged
Glands and Tumors disappear under
a protracted use of this greatest of
blood-purifiers. “Golden Medical Discovery” is the
only blood medicine, among the scores
that are advertised, possessed of such
positive curative properties in selling As it, to Wap¬ they
rant doing, its proprietors through druggists, under as
are a
positive guarantee of benefit or cure
in every case , or money paid for it will
be promptly refunded. World’s Dir-
pensart Medical Association, Pro-
prietors, No. 663 Main St., Buffalo, N.Y;
30INC NORTH
—*OR—
lljiii WEST
“-TAKE ONE OF THE—
BURLINGTON ROUTE
—THROUGH TRAIN* FROM —-
ST. LOUIS AND CHICAGO
—TO—
Kansas City, St. Joseph, Denver, St.
Paul and Minneapolis.
The Best Line for nil Points Nor th and
West nml the Pacific C oast*
CHEAP LANDS.
Aloha the Lines of the BriS'lin^tOn Rome 1 in Ne*
britslUi* C'olotttrio, Wj ottiiulr Northwest
ern____ jvernuuMt Land
n waiting settlement ment. . These Lunds aro Agricultural am >ug the be eud it
fco be had nnyw lddre in i; t he country f< 1'
Grati lira 2 in u purposes. Fa p:unphjdts a,nd ottier matter;
giving of the Burlington b’ca Lui yild full Route particulars, th i addres waders any gned. Agent
or
A MAP OF THE UNITED STATES.
A 1« rgs, handsome Map of ihe Unit d States,
showing North and South Dakota, m iunte-1 nn-J
suitable for office nnd home use, and issu’d uy iu»
“Burlington Route." ,'vilj he faruisnei respo ;*
s’.ble rr'TWik’S iCJeii'l I s ass. Agent But’Slnstoii EEEiOTfI Route,
II. R. TODD, St. Louis. Mo.
G ei»*I Agent Burlington Route,
Atlanta, LJa.
Certiito United States coins of 1S75V80, SI
arc and very 78. valuable; Certain half ai^o dollar* 20 cent or IJR'C** 1861
tjmure of li»77 cf Ia04,$e00. Thou-
worth $500; United dollars States ftud foreign eotns,
“"cjffifrdertienjfiuey. santls of otb«r wntih lartfe
fiend, 1(1 etc., ate Guide |»r«*
hiiums. cents for Coin "\ Slue
and toms to agents. Ladles or geuts maka
79 *5 p<*r riar writing f«r us st homo. Addrcrt
ELECTRIC Cl URL NT CO., LouhvUle, E j.
IMPROVED EXCELSIOR INCUBATOR
fcTB fic*l *} forlUus Uat* «K0. STAHL, quiuey.UI,
Minis
X prescribe and the fttiiy only
dorse Big G as
r, koi'uAYg. specific for the certain cure
of this disease.
}Mrantecd cot t G. H. I1SLG RAH AM, M. D.,
flame Stricture. Amsterdam, N. Y.
Iffd only bytbo Wo have sold Eig G for
!v*n« Chemical Co. many years, and It ha#
Cincinnati,3£ji .given the best of Bfttte-
k Jft Rtu’fiYCHE&Ce-..
Ohio. Chicago, lit.
r lu-l1Sl.no. Sold by Druggists.
A. N. U....... ......Mine, 1893.
STANDARD FOR OVER HALF A CENTURY
Cure Indigestion, Sour Stomach, Heart-
burn, Flatulency,Colic, nnd all Diseases of
the Stomach; Ooativenose, Inflammation,
Congestion, Diarrhoea, Piles, and Diseases of the BowcIb;
Headache, Biliousness, Jaundice, Nausea,
Giddiness, Nerrousne**, Wan¬
and dering Pains, Malaria, LIvfr Complaint,
al 1 Diseases arising from a Gorged and
Sluggish Liver. They clean the mucous
coats, reduce gorged or congested condi-
give o^rT.-’jrd
the system a chance to recover tone
and strength. Thtvaio
PURtLY VEGETABLE, „
'STRICTLY RELIABLE,
‘-absolutely
For Sale by all Druggists. Price 25 ct8.
per mail, box; 3 boxes for 05 cts.; or sent by
postage free, on receipt of price,
Dr. J, II. Schenck & Son. Philadelphia, p tt .
SYRUP
Will Cure
COUCHS. CO LDS,
And-AH Disease* cf the
THROAT AND LUNGS,
It i# pleasant to tho tasto.
and doss not .^ffit: contain a par-icls
l°tS,h r
per bottle. Dr. Schenck’s Book
on Consumption and its Cui e,
mailed free. Address
D<\ J.H.Schenck & Son, Phll.t.