Newspaper Page Text
Electricity in the Home.
Prof. R. II. Thurston, in a recent ar¬
ticle, gives a graphic description future, of what lie
electricity will do in the near
says it will break up the present factory
system and enable the home worker once
more to compete on equal terms with
great aggregations of capital engines in unccru- will
pnlous hands. Great steam
undoubtedly become generally (lie sources
of power in largo cities, and will semi out
the electric wire in every corner of the
town, helping the sewing woman at her
machine, the weaver at his pattern loom,
the mechanic nt his mechanical engine lathe, aids needed giving
every house the
in the kitchen, the laundry, elevator, and
at the same time giving light, and pos¬
sibly heat, in liberal quantity and inten
•ity.— 8citiit{fic American
A roF.T asks: “What is warmer than a
woman's love?’’ We infer that lie never
picked up a newly-coined horse-shoe
fresh from the forg .
What It Costs
Miwt bo carefully consl'lorcl by the great majority
of people Ik* fore buying even what may seem abso¬
lutely necessary. Hood’s Sarsaparilla commends
Itself with special force to the great middle classes,
because It combines positive <»cononiy with great
medicinal power. It is the only medicine of which
can truly be said
IOO Doses One Dollar
And a bottle of Hood’s Sarsaparilla taken according
to directions w ill average to last a month, while
other medicines Inst but half or quarter as long.
This Is practical and conclusive evidence its to Its
strength and economy. Try Hood’s Sarsaparilla aud
sec for yourself.
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
ftold by all druggists. ; Bix for ty>. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
IOO Dosos Ono Dollar
Bermuda Bottled.
“Yon must tr‘> It, lleriini.la. II
you «ln not I will tuil lie I'esponst-
l,l<> lor (lie pnliseqiieiireN.” “ Kill,
tlm-lor, 1 ran alTuri! neither the
time nor the money.” “ Well, ll
tlial Is IminiNhiltle, try
Fmulsion
OF PURE NORWEGIAN
COD LIVER OIL.
I sometimes call It ilcrinnda Mot¬
tled, anil many rate, of
Bronchitis, CONSUMPTION; Cough
or Sc vow Cold
I have MTIIlIt wiili if; anil Hie
R<lvanla-e In llial (lie moat srnsi-
live alomaeli ran take 11. Another
tlilnR whirl, ritmiitends It I, the
atlmnlatlns proper!Ira ol the Ity-
Von popho-phite* which It contains.
wili find it for aale at your
ItriiKKl'l's imt her yon vet. the
original SCOTT’S I.Ml INION.”
ss
mg
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SI A
\ MI
\\A\ r
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MW 0 >CHe s
f J F*’ rk '3r e / % V
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JstrRIEHD" -'.MOTHERS
LESSENS c&SS RAIN r\
.pro to u ■n
BRADFIELD S«D REGULATOR CO. ATLANTAn/\
BO 1C) BY ALL DZUGGJSVS. Ui 1
mm ii SEVENTY
To cure Biliousness. Blok Headache. Constipation,
Malaria. Liver Complaints, take the safe
and certain remedy, SMITH'S
BILE BEANS
Use the SMALL SIZK (40 little beanei to the bot¬
tle). They are the most convenient: suit all age*.
Price of either she, 25 cents per bottle.
KISSING panel & omu'wetu^n
cent# (coppers or stamps).
J. F. SMITH A: CO..
Makers of • Bile Beans.' st. Luuls. Mo.
■SILDinWCAPJ Elys Cream Balm.
WILL ITHK
H11D R E N
V : or CATARRH,
Apply 1 hilm into each nostril.
KLY BROS., 56 Warren St.. N. Y.
j BUSINESS
COLLEGE,
NASHVILLE, TENN.
1 This College, though yet in its infancy,
hnsinore than OOP former atudent a occu¬
pying gojd salaries position*, from many of them re¬
ceiving ranging $ 1)00 to $!••*
500 per annum. For circulars, address
K. W. JKNN1NOS. Prln.
MOORE’S
COLLEGE. ATLANTA, CA.
of Shorthand students t*o«ht good hy’erpJrtanU'd teJhOT*'’T&mMnd,
in naymg positions. Terms moder .to.
fetadwntfrecei ivea daiiy. Semi for circulais.
6 JONES
TON SCALES OF
$60 BINGHAMTON
k Beam XSffcrl*? £ ALL Box Tare SIZES Beam \ v- 4 /
OMiiill
THE SLAVE-SHED.
\
Hapless Wretches Captured in
African Forests.
Many Become Victims of Cer¬
emonies in Congo Villages.
FrCm E. J. Glove’s article, “The
8 avo Trade in tho Congo Ihsin," pub¬
lished in tho Century, we quote as fol¬
lows: “Theso hungry creatures form
indeed a truly pitiable sight. After
suffering this captivity for a short timo
they become mero skeletons. All ages,
of both sexes, aro to bo seen: mothers
with their babes; young men and
women; boys and girls, and even babies
who cannot yet wulk, and whoso
mothers died of starvation, or perhaps
wero killed by tho Lufcmbo. One
scldim sees either old men or old
women; they aro all killed in tho raids;
their marketable value being very
small, no trouble is taken with them.
“Witnessing greups of these poor,
helpless sirctchc 1 *, with their emaciated
forms and sunken eyes, their faces a
very picture of sadness, it is not diffi¬
cult to pcrce.rvo tho intense grief that
they are inwardly suffering; but they
know too well it is of no U3c to appeal
for sympathy to their merciless masters,
wdio liavo been accustomed from child¬
hood to witness acts of ciuelty and
brutality, so tha/ to satisfy their insati¬
able grejd lhey will commit them'.clves,
or perm't to be committed, any atrocity,
however great. Even tho pitiable sight
of one of theso slaves-shod3 does not
half represent the misery caused by this
traffic—homes broken up, mothers
separated from their babies, husbands
from wives, and brothers from sisters.
When last at Masankusu I saw a slave
woman who had with her one child,
whose starved little body she was
clutching to her shrunken breast. I
was attracted by her sad faco, which
betokened great suffering, 1 asked
her tho cause of it, and she told me in
a low, sobbing voice the following
talc:
“ ‘I was living with my husband and
throe children in an inion l village, a
few miloi from here. My husband was
a hunter. Ten days ago the Lufembe
attacked our settlement; my husband
defended himself, but was overpowered
and speared to death with several of the
other villagers. I was brought hero
with my three children, two of whom
have already been purchased by the
traders. I shall never sea them any
more. Perhaps they will kill them on
tho death of some chief, or perhaps
kill them for food. My remaining
child, you see, is ill, dying from star¬
vation; they give us nothing to oat. I
expect even this one will be taken from
me today, as the chief, fearing lc3t it
should die and become n total loss, has
offered it for a very small prico. As
for myself,’ said sho, ‘they will soil me
to one of tho neighboring tribes, to
toil in tho plantations, and when I be¬
come old and unfit for work I shall be
killed.’
“There were certainly 500 slaves ex¬
posed for solo in this ono village alone.
Large canoes were constantly arriving
from down river with merchandise of
all kinds with which they purchased
those slaves. A largo tiadj is carried
on between the Ubangi and Lulungu
rivers. The people inhabiting the
mouth of the Ubangi buy tho Bololo
slaves at M tsankusu and the other mar¬
kets. 'They then take them up tho
Ubangi river and exchange them with
the natives there for ivory. These na¬
tives buy their slaves solely for food.
Having purchased slaves they feed them
on ripe bananas, fiih and oil, and when
they get them into gool condition
they kill them. Hundreds of the Bu-
lolo slaves are taken into tho river and
disposed of in this way each month.
A great many other slaves are sold to
the large villages on tho Congo to sup¬
ply victims for tho execution coromon-
ies.
‘'Much life is lost in tho capturing of
slaves, and during thoir ciptivity many
succumb to starvation. Of the remain¬
der, numbers aro sold to become vic¬
tims to cannibalism and human sacrifice
ceremonies. There are few indeed who
aro allowed to live and prosper.”
The Future of Electricity.
Ill chatting about tlie future of e!oc-
tricity, Mr. Gibbons said: “I shall not
bo surprised if wc find some way in the
near future of utilizing tho enormous
force of Niagara Falls to create an elec¬
trical current that will supply New
York city. There are problems to bo
solved in tho way of overcoming resis¬
tance and considering spaco before that
can bo dono, and I believe (lie solution
will bo found. Experiments are teach¬
ing us something new about electricity
every day and nothing would surprise
me. Why, I oven imagine a tube from
New York to Chicago being construct¬
ed through which passengers can be
shot at five miles a minuto, or so, by
electrical fore •. Iideed, no ono can
safely predict that we may not tunnel
•he ocean in the same way .’’—Fete York
Press.
Silk Caps at the Grave.
A new innovation at funerals here re¬
cently is silk skull caps, to be woru by
the minister in charge and the bearers
at tho grave, also by the male members
of the family. The ca are put on in
the carriages and the ordinary hats loft
there, the capes to be worn all tho time
at tho grave. It wiii prove it many
colds. —Hartford Tima.
FOR FARM AND GARDEN.
COST OK KEEPING A HEM.
According to tho poultry editor of
tho Farm J.urnal, tho feed necessary
for 100 lions for a year is as follows:—
1000 pounds clover hay chopped, 1000
pounds potatoes, 2000 pounds corn
meal, 1000 pounds oats, 100 pounds
cotton seed meal, 800 pounds barley
meal. Supposing these amounts to be
nearly correct, os wo presuino they aro,
tho cost of tho article will bo about 70
por cent., or 70 cents per hen. Any
respcctablo lien ought to lay eggs enough
in tho course of a year to bring $1.50,
or moro than double tho cost of her
keeping. If (his figuring is correct the
poultry business ought to pay better
than most brancliei of farm ng.
MIXING OF MELONS AND CUCUMBERS.
When cucumbers aro planted near
melons and both aro in bloom at the
sumo time, the different plants aro apt
to become mixed to some extent by the
visits of bees, which carry pollen from
one to tho other. To some extent the
effect of the mixture is apparent tlie
same year in tho fruit, but the next
year it is much more so when the cross¬
bred plants aro produced from the
seed. This first year’s mixture ist
however, rare, and has only occurred
with the writer once in several
years’ experience. It is safest
to procure fresh seed every year
for small gnrdeus in which related
plants aro necessarily grown close to
each other.— N. Y. Time*.
IT.ANTING AND CULTIVATING COHN.
As soou at the weather has become
settled and the ground is warm and
dry, corn shou'd be planted. Early
planting, generally speaking, gives the
best results. When the weather and
soil will permit farmers ought to be
ready to drop their seed.
The ground must be rich and friable
to produce paying yields of corn.
Where ploughing is to bo done (he
ploughs should be started as soou as the
toil is dry enough to admit of it.
Piantiug corn in drills is now the
coinmou practice, Flat culture is iu
order except on low lauds, where culti¬
vation iu liiils is still practised, For
largo growing varieties of corn tho rule
is drills ironi four to five feet apart,
while for small corn a distance of three
feet is sufficient. The plants arc thinned
to from three feet to 18 inches in the
drill according as the variety may sug-
s.st. The seed should not be covered
too deep; two inches are quite sufficient
and more than enough in mellow
ground. The use of tho roller alter the
seed has been drilled iu is very gener¬
ally practised by progressive farmers.
HIVING DEES AUTOMATICALLV.
The hiving of bees automatically lias
been tried for years with not very grat¬
ifying results; and many claim to make
them cluster just, where they want
them to; but let me charm ever so
wisely, says a writer it the Prairie Farm¬
er, I always fail to get them to do it.
They told me plainly that they would
cluster just whore they pleased. This
now fad is made by placing a drone and
queen-trap m front of the hive in such
a way that tho worker bees can pass in
and out of the hive, but tho drone and
queen cannot. So that when the queen
comes out, she cannot follow but re¬
mains in the cage, and ns soon
as the bees miss her, will return.
The automatic hiving is dono in this
way; To this drono and queen-trap is
attached a passage-way of perforated
zinc, which leads to another trap at¬
tached to an empty hive alongside
it. When the queen comes out she
ennuot got through, and goes along the
passage-way into the empty hive, aud
as soon as the swarm miss her, return,
and hunting her, find her in tho
hivo. As soou as a bee finds her
communicates with the rest cf
swarm and they soon follow.
GillTl IN TIIE nose of SHErr.
A subscriber from Ohio asks: “What
is the matter with our sheep? A num¬
ber of the flock huddle together with
their heads turned inward and close to
tlie ground. They are restless, fre¬
quently sneeze, aud paw the ground up,
into which they thrust their noses re¬
peatedly, as though annoyed by fi e,’.' ’
Tliis irouble is caused by the sheep
gad-fly (Estris ovis, which is persever-
ingly attempting to deposit its eggs in
the uoso of tho sheep, where the warmth
and moisture of the mucous membrane
soon hatches them, an l wdioro they as¬
cend the nasal sinuses to remain till the
warm days of tho following spring,
whoa they drop upon the ground, in
which their larval life is soon changed
to tho chrysalis and perfect insect.
In this state their sole and immediate
occupation is reproduc'.ion, and por.
peluation of their species, without
feeding; this acornplished, they die.
In tlie wlio’e couise of their parasitic
life they annoy the sheep; but, prob¬
ably more about tho limi of their
descent from the nose. Thoir presence
aggravates colds, which affect sheep
moro or less during the inclement
weather of the fall, winter and spring.
AVhatevcr the anuoyance of sheep,
their fleeces suffer in proportion to its
exient; like the disturbance of milch
cows by flies, when the yield of milk
is proportionately decreased. The
simplest remedy against the grub ii a
trough of pulverized salt and dus>
placed in tho sheep pasture. Several
places spaded up, with a full supply of
salt, answer equally well. Coal tar
daubed upon the nosea Is a preventive.
It may be freely poured over the dug-
up earth and salt, and the sheep will
besmear thoir own nosos. If required,
by the severity of tho annoyance, an
injection of an ounco of salt and an
cquul quantity of coal tar dissolved in
a quart of water and thrown up tho
sheep’s nose every night for a few days,
will complete tho remody. Tobacco-
smoke, tobacco-decoction, snuff, or
other narcotics are too dangerous.
Sheep are very susceptible to nar¬
cotics, which renders their use hazard¬
ous. —American Agriculturist.
FARM AM) GARDEN NOTES.
Prune trees early for growth and lato
for fruit.
All foods for plants must bo soluble
to be available.
Too much and too rich food is often
the cause of npoploxy.
Chopped onions fed once or twice a
wreck help to keep fowls healthy.
Dig no trenches around your treos, if
you do not want to shorten the roots.
Give your fruit trees a good soil.
They cannot feed and thrive on noth¬
ing.
The shelter that shuts out both pure
and cold air is not a profitable struc¬
ture.
Do your shortening back among your
young trees before tho buds begin to
start.
There should always bo plenty of
clean drinking water in the poultry
yard.
Prune a little at a time and avoid
the necessity for heavy pruning in the
future.
Bono meal mixed with other food is a
valuable preventive of leg weakness in
young fowls.
Iviud but firm treatment is impera¬
tively demanded in the training of all
young animals.
Farmers’ clubs cau be made profitable
hi the practical experience each of the
members can give.
Remember that with the warm
weather come iice, aud give good care
lo prevent them on the sitting hens.
The Pekin is probably the most
popular duck for the farm, being
hardy, easy to raise and of a nice size
and appearance for marketing.
The question of cleanliness and good
ventilation of horse and cow stables is
all-important to owners of stock. Pure
air is t he cheapest medicine any one can
take, or furnish for his animals.
A farmer’s daughter advises women
about to begin turkey raising to start
with good stock, and names the pure
bronze as handsome, salable, thrifty
and easier to manage than the common
turkey.
Food for horses and cattle should bo
of the best quality aud kept free from
dust, moistuio and vermin. A very
common error iu stable management is
not properly preventing mice and rats
from gaining access to the granary, as
well-bred animals will often refuse a
meal of grain that has been run over
and soiled by tho pests.
All stone fruits are difficult to graft.
As the cherry buds swell very early, the
scions should be cut some timo before.
It is a slow process, forming a junction
of the new scion with the old wood,
and if tho bud is swollen almost into
loaf before the graft is inserted, there
will bo too much evaporation before sap
can be supplied from the new stock.
The Theory of Dew.
It is now held by tho best physicians
that instead of falling from above tha
dew arises from the earth. The gener¬
ally received opinion that the dew is
formed of vapor existing at the time in
the atmosphere must be given up fot
the established fact that tho vapor
which arises from the heated earth is
trapped by the cold surface earth.
Besides, when we imagine that on a
cool evening after a sultry day in s unt¬
mer our feet are being wot by tho dew
on the grass, we make a grave mistake.
For that moistujp on the grass is not
dew at all, it is false dew—in reality
tho transpired humor of tho plants.
The drops at the tips, which glisten
diamond-like, are not dew; close ex¬
amination shows that these crystalline
spheres are ail situated at the points
where the veins of the leaves cut the
outer oJges. Theso drops only give
evidence of the vitality of tho plant.
Tho difference between the true dew
on the gra-s and the exuded drops
through tho veius from within the grass
can be <asily distinguished, for the
former is distributed all over the blade
in a moist film; whereas the latter are
of some size, and nro situated near the
tips of tho blade. Altered, theu, is the
meaning of tho line: “Ilka blade o’
grass keeps its ain drap o’ dew,” for
those brilliant globules on tho petal,
shaking to the same sweet air, nod often
“gliding at once ai! fragrance into one,”
are uo dewdrops, but are exudations of
the healthy plants. They give evidence
of the elixir vitae of vegetation; where¬
as, the true dew is the pearly luster,
varnished in filmy humidity over the
blades by that wondrous alchemy which
transforms the water vapor rising from
the ground into tho plant refreshing
dew. — Good Words.
Unfortunate.
Mss Gas well—Pop, did you see
he Prince o’ Wales while you was in
Europe, an’ did yo talk with him?
Pop—I saw ’im, but the crowd was
so big he didn’t see me.
QUAINT AN1) CURIOUS.
A Sioux Indian is studying law iu
Chicago.
As tho result of a dispute in a res¬
taurant at Dobreczn, Hungary, forty
challenges to duels have beon issued.
An observing Georgia man claims
that tho crow digs a holo and buries in
it the corn which it secures in the fiold,
holding tho supply until necessity
compols its use.
A gun has just been fiuishcd by
Krupp for tho Russian government
-which weighs 135 tons, is 40 feet long
and is six and a half feet iu diameter in
tho widest part. It will have a rango
of 11 milc3.
Pets to bo carried in the arms are tto
longer confined to King Charles span¬
iels, with long, silky ears, and softly
purring gray maltose eats; but every
conceivable variety of animal is now
considered proper for street wear.
The other day a Minnesota clergyman
traveled 30 miles, made six calls, visit¬
ed two schools, gave an afternoon lec¬
ture and shot seven jackvabbits, all be¬
tween sunriso and sunset, and he said it
wasn’t a good day for pastoral work
either.
A dentist in St. Louis says that there
is wholesale destruction existing in tho
majority of dentifrices offered for sale.
C >ld water and a han.1 brush ought to
be sufficient, but if an additional prep¬
aration be desired, prepared chalk is
the best and simplest in tho world,
A firm of coal merchants at Swans*
combo, England, liaved sued tho owner
of a menagerie for $‘253, tho value of a
horse alleged to have died from fright
at the sight of one of the menagerie
e'ephants. Tlie horse was boing driven
along the road, when it saw the ele¬
phant; it gave one spring into the air
and dropped dead.
White deers are very scarce things,
but B. F. Coburn of Molunkus, Me.,
seems to huve no trouble in fiuding
them. He hns secured the skin of one
that is perfectly white, not a colored
hair on it. It was shot about two
months ago near Mount Ivatahdin, and
is tho second white deer killed in this
State in five years.
Wolves are very thick on Beaver
Creek, in the northwest part of Alpena
County, Mich. They have driven a
woodsman into the river, and if his
cries had not brought help they prob¬
ably would have eaten him. After
nightfall they have followed the teams
to the landings, coming within a few
rods of the log woodsmen.
A quaint Superstition formerly exist¬
ed in Wales to the effect that bees were
originally created white, but became
brown after the fall; a white pigeon
settling on a chimney is regarded as a
certain token of death; and in some
parts, if in a row of beans oae should
happen to come up white instead of
green a member of the family will die
before tho yoar is out.
The Senate Gavel.
The Vice-President’s gavel is of it¬
self a standing evidence that the Senato
is an orderly body and needs no school¬
master for a presiding oftber to compel
quiet. Tho gavel has no handle. It
never did have any. It is simply a
little piece of white ivory like the head
of a gavel, polisho l and shiniug. It
would not do in the House at all, for
the most that can be done with it is to
give a gentle rapping on the desk, and
in tho other wing the Speaker some¬
times needs to hammer away like a man
with a beetle. T.iis Senate gavel, with
which Vice-P.oiident Morton tells the
Senators that they aro miking too much
noise, has been in existence and in use
as a gavel for many years. It is the
identical ouc, it is said, which was in
use when Daniel Webster was in the
Senato, an 1 probably was used the day
he made his reply to Hayne, to still the
buzz in the gallery when the great man
sat down. This, at any rate, was said
to be true tho other day.
There is a mystery about the gavel,
too. Nobody but C'apt. Bassett, the
white-haired door-keeper, knows what
becomes of it during the recess and
when Congress is not in session. The
venerable old Capt. Bassett takes it
from the Vice-President’s desk when
the Senate adj >urus and liidei it some¬
where, and it is lost to the world until
it is again needed by tho Vice-Presi¬
dent. Capt. Bas-ott knows the history
of the gavel, as he does of everything
else about the Senate chamber, for he
has been there since some time in the
thirties or fortiei, when he first received
his appointment—r-as a page, it is said—
through the influence of Daniel Web¬
ster. It has been suggested that Capt.
Bassett carries the gavol ia his pocket
ns a mascot when the Senate is not in
session, though this is probably not
true. — St. Paul Pioneer-Press.
A Knife Blade iu His Brain.
William Benjamin Rowland, a cart-
man, recently died of phthisis at a
London hospital, and when the doctors
made a post mortem they found a steel
knife blade run into his skull for an
inch and broken eff there. It had
been there so long that the bone had
healed over the spot where it had en -
tered. Tho blade had passed botween
the convolutions of the brain, which
was uninjured. The nearest incident
that could account for the presence of
the blade in the man’s brain had oc¬
curred nice months before, when he
was thrown from a wagon and had his
head severely hurt.
I rate Student— 1 Don’t you ever sweep
under the bed, I’d like to know?” Calm
chambermaid—“I always do, I perfer
it to a dustpan.”
The man who is able to travel exten¬
sively can generally learn enough iu a
yoar to make a bore of himself all the rest
of his life. ■>
The tailor-made girl is said to tie go¬
is ing good out of fashion, The ITiuly-mitde girl
enough fot anybody.
Decay! Ilie I’nlrrmnl I.dw;
Inactive,and Let anything In nature bet-time usual itfel'oss and
Decay is tlie universal deV-ay ft!I lmvs law. use sequence.
when Can you wonder
more thunhnlf o person feels constantly worn out and
or kidneys Bets dead, in. They that decay that of decal- tho Jungs of the
mugs (consumption) ami decstV gay Of the kidneys
Dnly (Bright those s disease! Is I hot) table. Who says so ?
frficdi Don’t eXpoHmbntu! despair. doctors who _____ have
thebe’s hope 1 In checking While decay of there’s the lungs life,
or it is kidneys. essential In preventing further ulct ration,
that all blood impurities should
bo removed, and an alterative influence ex¬
erted upon the whole system. The appetite
and digestion must both be improved. The
nervous sweet restorer, system invited soothed, and and sleep, nature’s En¬
ergy must be aroused and mental encouraged. depression
banished. In this monuntous rallying effort
Dr. John Bull’s Sarsaparilla is an essential
ally to nature. Usothfs remedy. It has re-
stored many to health and strength, even after
doctors had given up all hope.
bumble, Many persons nro bumbled witbout being
nevertheless It is true that humilia¬
tion is the road to humility.
HALL’S CATARRH CUKE Is a liquid and
. taken internally, and directly the
is acts on
mood and mucous surfaces of the system.
“ rite for testimonials, free. Manufactured
bv F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O,
A man is happiest when he can furget all the
mean things he knows about himself.
tried My son is affected with weak but 81111 Kings attd has
various treatments, % Ssi-aaiui-
rilla has done him more good than all tot her
medicine, I eheet-fullV make this statement
for the benefit of the a minted .—John S. AfcG’ee,
Horse Cave, Ky.
The habitually Only-Way to be permanently safe is to
lie ntonest.
Darents you do yourselves and your children
great I)r. injustice if you fail to give your children
Hull’s Worm Destroyers. Many little lives
are sacrificed by such neglect.
Even when a man weighs his words he often
finds they have no weight.
FITS stopped free by Du. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first day’s
use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial
bottle free. I)r. Kline, 931 Arch St„ Phila., Pa
I f afflicted with sore eyes use Dr .Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Eye-Water.Druggists sell at 25c per bottle.
Beecham’s Pills act like magic on a Weak
Stomach.
A pocket, pin-cushion free to smokers of
“Tansill’s Punch” 5c. Cigars.
Fob* Fifty Years
the
Standard
Blood-purifier
and
Tonic,
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla
has no equal
as a
Spring
Medicino.
Prepared by
Dr. J. G. Ayer & Co.,
Lowell, Mass.
r *
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In DOKxLASi Brockton, Tlusd.
DETECTIVES
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598 PAGES. PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED,
The Book is written in plain, every-day English,
and is free from the technical terms which render most Doctor Books so valueless to
the generality of readers. This Book is intended to be of Service in the Family, and
is so worded as to be readily understood by all.
ONLY 60 CENTS POSTPAID.
(The low price only being made possible by tho immense edition printed.)
Not only does this Book contain so much Information relative to Disease, but very
properly gives a Complete Analysis of everything pertaining to
COURTSHIP, MARRIAGE AND TIIE PRODUCTION AND REARING OF
HEALTHY FAMILIES; TOGETHER WITH VALUABLE RECIPES
AND PRESCRIPTIONS, EXPLANATION OF BOTANICAL
PRACTICE, CORRECT USE OF ORDINARY HERBS.
NEW EDITION, REYISED AND ENLARGED WITH COMPLETE INDEX.
With this Book in the house there is uo excuse for not knowing what to do in
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but send at once for this valuable volume.
ONLY 60 CENTS POSTPAID. Send postal uotes or 2-ceut postage stamps*
ATLANTA PUBLISHING HOUSE,
114-118 LOYD ST., ATLANTA, GA.
4
A - c «.l
1 m
bNR ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
and 6y rup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
gently refreshing to the taste, and acts
Liver and yet promptly Bowels, cleanses on the Kidneys, the
tem effectually, dispels colds, head¬ sys¬
aches and fevers andcureB habitual
constipation. remedy of 8yrup kind of Figs is the
only dimed, pleasing its the ever pro.
to taste and ad-
Ceptablo ite action to and the stomach, prompt in In
trul only v beneficial its
effects, prepared from the most
Its healthy and agreeable qualities substances,
many excellent com¬
mend it to all and have made it
the Syrup most popular Figs remedy is for sale known, in 600
of
and |l Bottles by all leading drug-
gists. Any reliable druggist wiib
inay not have it on hand will pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it Do not accept
any substitute.
CALIFORNIA F/0 SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
tmsmiE, ky. NEW YORK, NY.
Burlington! GOING NORTH
Route. -OR—
| WEST
—TAKE ONE OF TIIE—
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-THROUGH TRAINS FROM-
ST. LOUIS AND CHICAGO
—TO—
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Paul and Minneapolis.
The Unit Line for all Points North mlit
West aud the Pacino Coast,
HOME SEEKERS’ EXCURSIONS 1
ftedtibedH«te*of one ijtrfcfoHhei*oiiM4 td trijiliarA
been ihade by the Biirliiitfton Route points tJtrthf .in
IdithO,Montana; Nebraskfi* North and Wyouiink) South OuKdlrt,
Northwestern Iowa, iUiuneMOia 20th, and VVis-
eoiiHtn* Hound trip tickets on waie May information app'y good
lor 30 ticket daj’8* For rates of and further Burlington Route,
to any agent the
ol’ address, HOWARD ELLIOTT,
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M, It. TODD, Gen’l Pass. Agt.
B.F. HLAKE, TraV. Freight d: Agt.
CHAS. I\ LUD^IIM,^
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lBBNorlh MnrUei*§tt„*ffn’sUville, Totlit.
m ^§8lP
ARE THE OLDEST FAMILY STANDARD-
A Purely Vegetlbie Compound, minetal. without Saf«
niefehry of tothef injurious
ahd sure always. For sale by all Druggist?:
Fulj printed directions for using with each
package. . Dr. Schenck’s new book on The
Lungs, Liver and Stomach SENT Free, Ad¬
dress Dr, J, H. Scbenck & Son, Philadelphia^,
PENNYROYAL - , fcHFCHESTER-S ENGLISk
PILLS
er > by »*etiirri
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PATENTS—PENSIONS iSr !Jt
gcat^of Pension ami Washington, Bounty laws. ^J Send RICK for L Inventors’ 1 ' ABRELL '
Attorney at Law, p
OPIUM rSvSSSlPd
-
satis-
Ohio. D. R. DYCHE & CO-
« Chicago, III.
Trade^^$a!2FS5' J Sark^§iJ ( ,if5©. Sold by Druggists,
1 Best, Piso’a Easiest Remedy to Use, for and Catarrh Cheapest. is tho
CATARRH
I 50c, Sold E. by T. druggists Hazeltine, <jr Warren, sent bv Pa. mail.
A. N. U....... • •,.....Twenty-two, 1890.
HIS OWN—
DOCTOR
By J. Hamilton Ayers, A. M., M. D>
This is a most Valuable Book for tha
Household# tenehiupi as it does the easily*
distinguished Symptoms of different Pis*
eases, the Causes and Means of Prevent¬
ing such Diseases, and the Simplest Rem¬
edies which will alleviate or clirfc.