Newspaper Page Text
FOR FARM AND GARDEN.
Brera THAT EAT THEIR FEATHERS.
The habit of pulling and eating their
feathers indiento* that tho fowls ore
•suffering from indigestion or improper
feeding, the result of which is a do-
praved appetite. It is the smne with
other animals which cat wood. It
may bo that the food does not sup¬
ply all the aliment necessary; thus,
when fowls or othor birds which need
some animal food aro fed only upon
grain, they crave different food and
iso cat their feathers. In all such cases
a change of food is needed, and some
clioppoi* meat would supply what they
require, which is nitrogenous matter.
—[New York Times.
BARE PATCHES <>S CAI.VES.
When the hair falls off in small
patches aiul the skin becomes cracked,
this is due to a cutaneous disease aris¬
ing from a vegolablc parasite which
grows in the skin and destroys tho
hair follicles or roots. It is contagious
nnd spreads from one animal to* an¬
other. It maybe cured as follows:
The diseased parts are washed with
warm water and carbolic soap to
soften the skin and open the pores,
an ointment mado of three ounces of
lard and one of sulphur, with one
dram of creosote mixed in the melted
lard, is well rubbed into iho skin with
a stiff brush. This is applied twice
daily.—[American Dairymsu.
SAVIXIi Asnss.
In any section of tho country where
wood is used for fuel it will pay fann¬
ers well to save the ashes for making
soap. The value of ashes has now be¬
come so wel'-known that there arc but
few persons so wasteful as to throw
them away. Persons who do not want
them for soap should by all means uso
them as fertilizers. In addition to
their va'uc for making domestic soap
they are worth a good deal to spread
on the land after tho potash has been
extracted. They arc especially valu¬
able for orchards nnd useful on close,
clayey soils. Where they are wanted
for lye a cheap leach is easily con
. strutted, or the ashes may be put into
k>ose barrels or old rice casks placed
oh an inclined platform so that the Ivc
will drain off into a receiver. The
aslics should be kept dry until tho lye
is wanted. The soap made from
hard wood ashes will l>e found much
superior to that made from the alka¬
lies bought at the shops.— [New York
World.
POTATOES NOT A I’REC ARIOL’S CROP.
There is probably no farm crop ia
which inexperienced farmers suffer
greater disappointments than in po¬
tatoes. They read in the papers of
large yields, and observing that the
market price is high, a great many
rush into the business, and, of course,
overdo it. This is case number one.
Potato cultnrc in these times require a
great fund of practical experience. It
also requires the man who begins it to
be prompt with every demand,
whether it be in cultivation, in bug
poisoning, and in late years in spray¬
ing tlie vines to prevent mildew ami
blight, which aro the usual causes of
rotting of the crop. It is no wonder
with so many tilings to attend to that
some are neglected. Ilenco potatoes
are commonly deemed a precarious
crop. Accidents of season excepted,
they need not be. We believe it pos¬
sible every year to grow potalo crops
that will pay larger profits than any
grain crop, provided the proper con¬
ditions are fulfilled.— [C'ourier-Jour-
lial.
POTATOES FOR FATTEN I NT, HOGS.
At the Wisconsin Experiment Sia-
tion, Professor W. A. Henry conduct¬
ed au experiment lasting forty-two
days, to determine the value of pota¬
toes for fattening hogs. The animals
were about ten mouths old. Tho po¬
tatoes were cooked with so little wa¬
ter that the mass after becoming thor¬
oughly soft weighed no more than the
raw potatoes did in the beginning. It
was found that the liogs did not like
the potatoes when much water was
nsed iu cooking. Tho meal fed was
mixed with the potatoes immediately
after cooking. Tho result of one
set of feedings was that 440 pounds
of corn meal produced 100 pounds
gain in flesh. Another set of feeding
gave 100 pounds gain in flesh from
262 pounds corn meal and 789 pounds
of potatoes This shows that 789
pounds potatoes took the plnco of 178
pounds of corn meal, or 443 pounds
of potatoes were required to tako the
place of 100 pounds corn ideal. This
makes one pound corn meal worth
nearly 4 1-4 pounds of potatoes.
More favorable results than these were
expected, but such are (be facts ob¬
tained.— [Boston Cultivator.
. TWI ACI SURFACE FOIL ONION’S.
Aii onion test car.led through two
seasons ai the Minnesota Experiment
Station gave resells strongly in favor
of firm soil. The bulb of a well-de¬
veloped onion grows near tlie surface
of tlie ground, the true rools going
down only a few inches. However,
if the soil be loose and open for any
considerable depth the roots grow
long, apparently t< the detriment of
the bulb. The shorter nnd more nu»
morons the tuft of roots the better they
seem able to nourish it. I„ certain lo¬
calities in l lorida where ihe soil is nalu-
rally very loose and Randy I have seen
onion beds where the bulbs were little
larger around than a man’s thumb.
Those onions could not be pulled up
but had to bo dug on account of the
long slender roots which clung ten¬
aciously to the soil to a depth of six
or eight inches. In the experiment
mentioned another interesting fact
was obsoi^ed—half of the ground used
was ploughed, the other harrowed, but
the weeds were much more numerous
on the ploughed half both
years. The onion crop seems
to stand alone in the requirement*
bothns regards mellowness of soil and
rotation, , , llic conductor of the cx-
periment questions the advisability of
plauling onions continuously without
plougliing. “It would ,, probably , , , , he
best to use the land two years without
ploughing, then plough as soon as pos¬
sible in the full after gathering the
crop.” The land will become suffi¬
ciently compacted before the follow¬
ing spring and would only requiro
harrowing to fit it for sowing the
seeds.—[New York Tribune.
FARM NOTES.
It is very important in managing in¬
cubator chickens not to got the brooders
too warm. It will keep the chickens
Weakly.
Do not be alarmed if you find a
number of dead bees about the en¬
trance of the hive. In summer time
you do not notice so many because the
colony carry their dead away iu their
daily flight.
Tho bees will take care of the empty
brood combs in the summer season
bctier than you can do it. in winter
they should be boxed lip tightly, after
being thoroughly fumigated with sul¬
phur, if they have any moth germs ill
them.
Do not allow lions or turkeys to
roost in your barns and stables; they
have vermin sometimes and communi¬
cate them to the live stock, where,shel¬
tered by the hair and fed by the blood
of the cattle, they will increase in an
astonishing ratio.
The Shropshire sheep is of medium
size, lias black face and legs, a fleece
of medium clothing wool of seven to
eight pounds, and is an excellent mut¬
ton animal. It is hardy, and when
kept will rear twins qu.te frequently.
It is now tho most popular farm
sheep.
Poor and thin live stock is of the
kind attacked by lice and vermin.
They may live, but will always be
stunted. Coal oil and soft soap ap¬
plied in repeated baths, will check, if
not entirely exterminate, the parasites.
With this give pulverized sulphur iu
millfeeil.
Young horses of a nervous tempera¬
ment arc easily frightened. The only
way to prevent their “shying” is to
make them acquainted with the cars,
robes, umbrellas, bridges, white stone)
or whatever frightens them in such a
kind, gentle manner, that they will
know they are not going to bo hurt.
Black knot on cherry and plum
trees is duo to a fungus which grows
in the bark and sap wood and gener¬
ally attacks the weak nnd unhealthy
trees. To get rid of it the excrescences
should be cut off, and all tho small
branches that are diseased removed
and burned. The trees should then
leccivc a liberal dressing of wood
ashes or air-slackcd lime, spuead as
far as tho branches extend.
More Indians Now Than Ever Before.
“One of the most curious and wide¬
spread of all popular delusions is that
which relates to the supposed exter¬
mination of the Indians of North
America before the march of civiliza¬
tion.” It was aa officer of tho Bureau
of Ethnology at Washington who
made this remark. “As a matter of
fact,” lie added, “the Indians are
probably more numerous on this couli-
nent to-day than they have ever boon
year. •
There aro now in tho United Statos
265,000 Indians. When Columbus
landed they were almost undoubtedly
of less number. The Indians of the
timo lived altogether by tiio chase
Under such conditions an enormous
exicnt of territory is necessary to sup¬
ply a tribe with food. Each tribe, as
things were then, ranged over a great
expanse appropriated to its own use
in the pursuit of game and fish. Be¬
tween ono tribe’s hunting ground and
that of another always I
was an exten¬
sive dividing strip. The whole coun¬
try mapped out on this and could not
sustain more than a small proportion.
“There is (lie best possible reason
for believing that two centuries and a
half ago tho Indians in what is now
the United States east of the Missis¬
sippi did not altogether exceed 180,-
000.”—[Albany Journal.
Coincidences.
First Stranger (on railway train) —
So you aro selling Prof. Blank’s new
book, arc you? Strange coincidence 1
I am Prof. Blank.
Second Stranger—That so? Thou
you wroto the very book I am agent
for ?
“Yes. The hardest work I ever did
was writing that book.”
“Well, well! That’s another strange
coincidence. The hardest work 1 ever
did was trying to sell it.”—[New
York Wceklv.
Discrimination in Words.
Pretty refers to external beauty is on a
small scale. Grace of manner a nat¬
ural gift; elegance impliei cultivation.
Well-bred is j referable to general conduct-
rather than individual actions. Beautiful
is the strongest word of its class, imply¬
ing softness nnd delicacy in in addition words. to
everything Courtesy that is similar others, polite¬
has reference to
ness to ourselves. The former is
a duty or privilege to others,
the latter is behavior Benevolent assumed^
from proper self-rospcct.
refers to the chaiactcr of the ngent act¬
ing, beneficent to the act performed. ms-giving,
Charitable is restricted to a
except when used in reference to judg- only
n '« nt °*other,. Lovely ia wed
where there is something more than
external beauty, when there is a combina-
tion of personal beauty and pleasing ronn-
J lt J- Faultless features do not make a
lady lovely who is disagreeable in dis-
position . —Boston Journal uf Education.
The Ladles Delighted.
The pleasant effect anil tho perfect safety
with which ladles may ure the liquid fruit lax¬
ative, Hyrup of Kiev,under all conditions make
it their favorite remedy. It Is pleasing to tho
eye and to the taste, gentle, yet effectual In
acting on the kidneys, liver and bowels.
1 450,000,000.__ The estimated population of he world Is
Malaria cured and eradicated from the
system by Brown's 1 ror. Bitters, which en¬
riches the blood, tones the nerves, aids diges¬
tion. Acts like a charm on persons In general
111 health, giving new energy and strengih.
taining I/mdon, the largest cl I y in the world, con¬
a population of 4,764,312 persons.
flow's This f
We offer One Hundred Hollars reward for
any case of catarrh that cannot be cured bv
taking Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Orkney & t o., Props., Toledo, O. i
We, the undersigned, have known F. J. 1
Cheney perfectly for honorable the last Id in years, ull and believe him
and able business transac¬
tions, ligations made financially by their firm. to carry out any ob¬
W EOT As Tau ax, \\ holesale Druggists, Tole¬
do, O.
Walling, Kins an & Marvin, Wholesale
Druggist Hall’s Catarrh s. Toledo, O. is taken
ing directly Cure the blood and internally, act¬
of the upon Testimonials mucous sur¬
faces system. sent free.
Price 76c. per bottle. Sold by ail drnggists.
Ilftwkes’ Spectacles.
The reputation of these fino glasses ts not of
the cheap order, 'they have been used, en¬
dorsed, and warmly praised by the solid repre¬
sentative men of the United States. Such
men recommend them ns Senator-elect Jno.
It. Wilson Gordon, of West Ex-Gov. Kitzhngh Rev. H. I.ee, Gov. E. \V. D.
Va , C. Morrison,
IJ; Bishop Alex. W. Gov. Gregg, Chancellor Uni-
Minister versity of the Japan; South; Judge R. Minna B. Hubbard, Ex-
to P. Hughes,
of Arkansas and many hundreds of others.
These famous spectacles are sold in nearly
every Call town from Maryland Take to New Mexico.
for Hawkes’. no others. Every pair
warranted.
Good Blood
Is absolutely
Essential to
Good Health
You may have
Both by taking
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
The best
Blood Purifier.
It possesses
Curative Power
Peculiar
To Itself
SMITH’S
Rile Qeans
Cure Biliousness
Blck Headache, Malaria, Costiveness, "Heart
Burn, Dizziness, Bad Breath, Nervous
Debility, Dysentery, Jaundice, _
Pains in tho Side and under
the Shoulder Blades.
Never fail to act on a Torpid Livor.
Expel poisonous bile from the system;
Clear the Complexion; Aid Digestion; Create
an Appetite; Cure and prevent Chills and
Fevers. We also make
Smith’s B ILE SMALL
EMS
(40 to the bottle.)
Some prefer this size. Especially coated. among Pleasant women
* 0<1 id children. Both sizes sugar
to take. ECtfftoMIOAL.
RELIABLE, SAFE,
Picture. b $“Wugglsk”' Write for
«m 4 »»««
’
i The
t Cod
j That Holps to Cure
The Cold.
i The disagreeable
i - taste of the
COD LIVER OIL
is dissipated in
SCOTT’S
EMULSION i
j Of Pure Cotl Liver Oil with 1
1 HYPOPHOSPHITES j
OW r.HwE£i AND SODA.
The patient suffering from
; nnoM consumption, Hins, c colii, '
4 WASTING DISEASES, or )
may take the ) !
I ( remedy with as much satisfaction as he )
would take milk. Physicians are prescrlb-
j 1 and lug a it wonderful everywhere. flesh producer. It. is a perfect Take emulsion. other I
no L !
ELY’S CUKAH BA Lit ^ mi
Absorbed, Applied lute Cleanses Nostrils the U Quickly Head, ^CaTaO
Heals the Sores ami Cure.
CATARRH j
Restores Taste and Smell, quick- SSL
ly Headache. Relieves Cold In Head and m
60c. at Druggists.
KLY BROS., 56 Wairen SL. N. Y.
For a Disordered Liver
Try BEECHAM’S PILLS,
26cts. a Box.
OB' AJ.L. ER.UGK3HSTS.
i
“German
Syrup” well-read phys¬
The majority of Consump-
icians now believe that
tion is a germ disease. In other
words, instead of being in the con¬
stitution itself it is caused by innu¬
merable small creatures living in the
lungs having no business there and
eating them away as caterpillars of do
the leaves trees.
A Germ The phlegm that is
coughed up is those !
Disease. parts of the lungs
which have been
gnawed off and destroyed. These
little bacilli, as the germs are called,
are too small to be seen with the
naked eye, but they are ver£ much
alive just the same, and enter the
body in our food, in the air we
breathe, and through the pores of
the skin. Thence they get into the j
blood and finally arrive at the lungs j i
where they fasten and increase with
frightful rapidity. Then German
Syrup comes in, loosens them, kills |
them, expells them, heals the places and
they leave, and so nourish
soothe that, in a short time and consump- well, j
tives become germ-proof a i
i*
: DOCTOR ■
■
! • ACKERS
‘ ■ ENGLISH >
IREMEDYl
JforCoughs, Colds and Consumption, Is beyond!
■ question the greatest of all modern remedies.!
• It willstopa Cough inone night. It will check!
■ a Asthma, Cold in a day. CURE It will Consumption prevent Croup, if taken relieve! In*
■ and
Stime. IF THE LITTLE ONES HAVE
! WHOOPING COUGH i «
■ OR
. • ! KTZ GROUP I
J ■ Pi -v Bv **•’}&IT & Use II Promptly, i
. A t HpWHEN WILL CURE!
* : -afO Sfs. THING EVERT-: else!
■ X • r/~~*can’t FAILS. afford “You:
; > 1 / bo without II.”! to;
A 25c. bottle may save „ MOO in Doctor’s bills!
•
I—may GIST FOR save IT. their IT lives. TASTES ASK YOUR COOD.; DRUG-*
J
x», m
%
“Id
\
m
>
-i Iff |S
I
The French Crown Jewels were distrib¬
uted and sold to the public; tbeir peculiar
cutting:and nizo them. We shape have enables one to these easily jewels recojj- in
some of
stock, Rubies and will be pleased to exhibit them. In
monds, Pearls, by Opals, Sapphires stock and in Dia¬
we have far the largest the
south, fine and quote the Jowest pric es for really
stones. Don’t buy before seeing our goods.
J. P. Stevens & Bro., Jewelers, 47 Whitehall
St., Atlanta, Ga. Send tor catalogue.
Every Farmerhis own Roofer
CHEAPER than Shingles, Tin or Slate.
Reduce* Your INSURANCE, and Perfectly
Fire, Water and Wind Proof.
IP .^STEEL iV > CORRUGATED SEMD TOR ROOFING, OURricw
7/ Catalogue at prices
lG LOB E- 1 R 0 to - ft OOFlNGCOa
if! m atiT o 3Ev|
Our Roofing Is ready formed for the Building,
Rnd can be applied by any one. Do not buy
any Roofing till Series you write B. AOEHTS to us for our WA Descrip¬ MTF J).
tive Catalogue.
VASELINE
FOR A ONK-DOLLAtt BIl.I.Mntos br m»U
we will deliver, free of ail charges, to any person la
the United States, all of the following articles,
fully packed:
One two-ounce bottle of Pure Vaseline. • • 10 ct*
Ono two-ounoe bottle of Vaseline Pomade* • 15 itim
One jar ot Vaseline Cold Cream,..... 15
Ono Coke of Vaseline Camphor Ice, - • • • W
One Cake of Vaseline Soap, unsceutel* scented,‘33 • - \ *
One Cake of Vaseline Soap, exquisitely it
One twv-ounce bottle of White Vaseline* - •
$1.1 >
Or for postage stamps any Simla article at the prioa
named. On no account be persuade t to •oesn t from
your druggist any Vaseline or preparation there fr m
unless labelled irith our name, because you will cer*
taint y receive an imitation which has little or no v.ilas
Ch««ebrouffli JHif. Co., 44 State sit.* N. Y*
PM PAINT.
Requires PARTOFOILA^ Addition or an
MAKING EQUAL f«6>ll.f|«2 fsc
COST
Advertised in 7348PAPERS
Wl ere we have no Agent will arrange Y.
’with any active Merchant.--I*. iV
At Honey 6 to Isonn policies
ior cent, on fraternal
by thin first clues
Order. An> body can net as
13 UNION an well, ngent. ladies Active also. farmers $200 do
to
FRflTE 70^ $4,900 in from nnd 8 to $7 7 years ($49
Miw ydrkJ; daring wocklyinsickness. life, Mention to
vfj* ifh this paper (Big nnd Pay.) write at once
^ to GI.EXKOR,
S.
8 Union Square, New York.
OPJutWisRY
Habits Cured without physical or mental in jury.
Dwight, Illinois. For particulars, address
THE KEELEY INSTITUTE, ATLANTA, GA.
Edgowood Avc. and Ivv St.*
PROF. LOISETTE’S NEW
MEMORY BOOKS.
Criticisms on two Full recent Tables 3femory Contents Systems. forwarded Ready
About April 1st. of
only to those who send stamped directed envelope.
Also'Prospectus POST FREE of the LoisettUui Art
ol Never Forgetting. Address
Prof. LOlSETTE, 237 Fifth Ave., New York.
PENSIONS Great The PENSION Bill
*!**— Soldiers* their
Widows, Moth-
titled to $12 a >no. Fee 110 whenVou get VraiAlufti>a, your money, D. C.
blanks free. JOSEPH 11. lil'NT&H, AUy*
BUGGYKHEtS POSITIVELY Oreely Pant REMEDIED stretcher
Adopted bv students at Harvard, Amherst andothar
t cl leges, also by professional and business moo ovary-
'kj'. 85c - u
Boston.
Ql'AINT AND CURIOUS.
A farm near the San Frnncisco bay,
in California, produces GOOO eggs a
day.
A California paper reports tlio catcli
of one black bass weighing 318
pounds.
Six millions of dead letters are an¬
nually torn and sold as old paper in
Washington.
The candles at Mrs. Roger A,
Pryor’s receptions, in Now York City,
stand in candlesticks 200 years old.
The drachma! and lepta of Greece
are the same as tho franc* and cen¬
times of France. Tho coins arc of the
same weight and fineness.
In South America no bread is ever
made in a private house, for the rca-
S'-n that stoves have been unknown
there until within two or three ycaas.
Mr. Henley, aged 95, finished an un¬
interrupted life of pauperism in tho
bosport (Lug.) workjiotise. lie was
brought tlicro wliou 6 years old in
1801.
Columbus sailed from the harbor of
Palos for lhe New World oil Friday,
August 3, UG2. lie discovered Cat
Island, of the Bahama group, on Fri-
day, October 2, 1192.
In Ohio, the other day, an adopted
son married an adopted daughter, in
compliance with their foster father’s
dying request, and in order to keep
his money in the family.
The numerically smallest religious
denomination discovered by the United
Stales census takers is that of the
Sciiwaukfeldians. There aro 306 of
them and they dwell iu Pennsylvania.
Tho coffin-plate of Washington has
just been sold in Philadelphia, Penn.,
for $80. This plate was taken from
the lid of liis coffin at the time his
body was placed in the present marble
casket.
Elias Howe, Jr., who was worth
$1,000,000, was the richest private
who served in tlie war. He enlisted
in Bridgeport, Conn., in 1862. At
one time, when supplies were low, he
paid the two mouths’ pay of his entiro
company.
Two musket balls were recently
found on the battlefield of Gettysburg
with their points so thoroughly tele,
scoped that they could not be sepa¬
rated. They had met in mid air.
Had they just passed, each might have
killed the soldier who fired the other.
Large flocks of goldfinches, bull¬
finches, European robins and other
birds, descendants of those imported
by the Society for the Importation of
Song Birds, have returned from their
winter migration, and are making the
orchards in (he vicinity of Portland,
Oregon, vocal with their songs.
Of the twenty-three surviving
widows of soldiers of the Revolution
now on the United States pension rolls
three live in Vermont and in Windsor
county. They are Esther S. Damon,
Plymouth Union, aged 76; Lucy
Mowe, East Barnard, Aged 86, and
11a tlie Richardson, East Bethel,
aged 89.
The physiciau3 at the Barge Office
in New York City recently discovered
that Angelo Amati, an Italian immi¬
grant, had eyes of two distinct colors.
One eye is brown, the other blue.
There was a difference in tlic color of
his eyes at birth,but disease and an at'
(endant operation much intensified
the disparity.
Length of Dreams.
Ariel could put a girdle round about
the world in forty minutes, but
he was slow compared with the
most ordinary dream. We survey
mankind in China and Peru at tiie
same instant of time,and in the course
of one revolving moon we may walk
with 1 lato in the Groves of Academe,
applaud Lnllier at the Diet of Worms,
■e: out for Holy Palestine with Cceur-
;lc-Lion, assist Noah in building the
ark, and call on the mountains to covet
us at tho Day of Judgment.
Many stories are told showing the
dift' rent count of time. Lord Broug¬
ham relates that he dreamed,a drearn
of long-continued action during a
short doze while a droning counsel
was pleading before him. Lord Hol¬
land fell asleep while listening to some
one reading, dreamed a long
dream, and awoke in time
to hear the conclusion of a
sentence the first words of which were
in his ears when lie became uncon¬
scious. Dr. Abercrombie relates that
a gentleman dreamed that lie had on.
listed for a soldier, joined his regi¬
ment, deserted, bad been apprehended,
carried back, tried, condemned to be
shot, and at last led out for execution.
After ail the usual preparations, h<
awoke with the report, and found that
a lioijp in an adjoining room had both
produced the dream and. awakened
him.
Another dreamed that he bad crossed
the Allnnlic and «f3nt a fortnight in
America. In embarking, on bis return,
be fell inlo the sea, and, having woke
with (ho flight, lie found that he had
not been asleep toil minutes. — [All the
Year Hound.
Approved Of It.
Young Man—Yes, I can mimic any¬
body. Did-you ever see me take your
daughter off?
Oid Gentleman—No, but I’d like
to.—rDeiroil Free Press.
Fancy Cookies.
Nioa Muffins. —Two eggs, butter size
of an ogg, one cup of sweet milk, one
tablespoon baking powder, sugar, flour one heaping make stiff tcaspoop bat¬
to a
ter; bake in mufiin rings or gem pans.
Pastby fob One Pie.— One lard, heaping
cup pastry flour, two teaspoons one
teaspoon baking powder, one teaspoon
salt. Sift flour, salt and baking powder
together. Hub and chop in shortening;
make quite stiff with cold water, one-
quarter cup or more.
CnEKsif Sticks.— One cup *of cheese
grated line, one and one-half cups flour,
butter size of small egg, salt to taste.
and Roll out like pie dough, cut in lead strips,
roll round about the size of pen¬
cil. When baked, cross the sticks on a
plate, pig-psp fashion.
' Kentucky Rolls.—P ut thr.e quarts
of flour in a large crock, teald one quart
of buttermilk and pour over the flour;
beat well, then add one cup of yeast nnd
one cup of butter or lurd. In the morn-
iug mix one teaspoon of fait, one table¬
spoon of sugar, and flour to make a stiff
dough. oughly, Let it rise twice, kneading thor¬
then make in long rolls, put in
pans, and bake when very light.
Canada, according to a report of the
chief of the Grain Inspection of Western
Canada, raised 50,000,000 bushels of
wheat last year, 20,000,000 bushels of
which will be available for export.
Brown’s Iron Bitters euros Dyspepsia, Ma¬
laria, Strength, Biliousnessani Digestion, General Debility. the Gives
aides tones for nerves— Nursing
crea es appetite. The best tonio
Mothers, weak women and children.
Easter is the pledge of Life rising out of
Death, 1 earth. of fellowship with all in Heaven and
a In
FITS stopped free by Dn. Kline’s Great
Nfrve Restorer. No Fits after first day’s
i re. Marvelous cures. Treatise and 82 trial
1 1 tile free. Dr. Kline. 931 Arch St., Phila., P,».
From Father to Son.
Scrofula is a blood poison which descends from parent to child.
It is a taint
which must be AFFLICTED FROM CHILDHOOD.
eradicated from
the system be¬ Mrs. N. Ritchey, of Mackey, Ind., says: “Justice com¬
fore pels me to say that S. S. 8. has worked little short of
a cure can a miracle in my case, in curing me of aggravated Scrofu¬
be made. Swift’s la, which afflicted me from childhood. It attacked my
Specific, S. S. throat and nose, and threatened my lungs. My throat
was so sore that I was oompelled to subsist on liquid
S., drives out the food. but When commenced I began S. 8. improve 8.1 was in a wretched condi¬
virus through tion to at once, and «,m now
entirely well.”
the pores of
___________
the 'skin and thus relieves the blood of the poison.
BOOKS ON BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES FREE.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ca.
_______
PT DOWN WITH HIGH PRICES.
WHY not buy from the Largest Factory of
Tk« WONDERFUL world, and SAVE Dealers’ Vrofiun REFRIGERATORS
SO & Over 1,000 Articles
SAFETIES direct to consumers, thereby pi® i=fS **741J
savin* 30 to 50 per cent.
Our New
, Automatic Brake
on all Coaches,
FREE.
LU8UI 1»J ICE CHESTS.
tricycles.
OFFICE and Ac. ^ r COWBIRATISR
THE J f’l
WONDERFUL 100 mm
LUBUR6 CHAIR 0C3I6NS U Zt'Ch
Combines a room-full IS
of Chairs in one, besides —
making a Lounge, Bed, or coairs.
Invalid appliances of every description ^
LIBRARY DESKS. Fancy Chairs, Rockers, Catalogue. &C. FOLDING BESS,
£3" Write at once for
Send stamps and mention goods wanted.
THE LUBURC MANUFACTURING CO. PHILADELPHIA. PA.
Have You a Cough?
Have You a Cold?
A. Or Taylor’s Consumption? Cherokee
Remedy of
Sweet Gum and Mullein
WILL CURE YOU!
Ask your Druggist or Merchant for it. Take nothing else.
ADVICE TO WOMAN!
For PAINFUL, PROFUSE, SCANTY, SUPPRESSED
or IRREGULAR MENSTRUATION, you must use
BRADFIELD’S
fEMALE
REGULATOR
Henderson, Ala., March 8, 1885.
For three years my wife has been under the treatment of the leading
physicians for menstrual troubles, without benefit, most of the time con¬
fined to her bed. After taking three bottles of BRADFIELD’S HEMALE
REGULATOR, she can do her cooking, milking and washing. N. L. BRYAN.
BOOK TO "WOMAN” MAILED FREE, WHICH CONTAINS VALUABLE INFORMATION ON ALL FEMALE DISEASES.
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., ATLANTA, GA.
For 8ale by all Pnxggisti. __
.
52
CD
lO
CYl
"Vv, CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH, RED CROSS DIAMOND BRAND
£ti fi, ) YEwmtom*r\uiS THE ORIGINALANDGENUINE. Tha only Safe. Sure, and reliable Pill for sals.
/tit?) Ijndle#, a*k Druggist for Chichester's English Diamond Brand in Roil und Gold metallic
boxes sealed with blue ribbon. Take no other kind. Refuse Substitutions and Imitations.
All pills ia pasteboard boxes, pink wrappers, are danfferouH counterfeit*. At Druggists, or senfl os
Ey 4k. in ."Humus for particulars, testimonials, and “Relief ter Larifen,” in letter, by return Mall.
pr j O.OOCLToslmimiiais.^ Name Papa-. CHICHESTER CH EM 1C A LjCO^MjdllgSguMe,
SEEDS.
We have the larpest and most complete stock of Gar¬
den and field Heeds in the <tate. Assorted boxes of
gai'd on Eeed Try (3C0 papers) at $3 per case, b ats consign-
•mn s. one. IL-d Uh-ver, Orchard Grass. B lie
Grass, Herds Grass, Time hy. .Johnson Grass, Lucerne,
Clover at d Tnll-m^adow Oat Grass. Cata ogue Free.
We import the ffcinous Bermuda Grass and sell it at $2
Drrlb. German ?«|UIef,$l .75 busJiel. Send your orders.
J. U. McMILLAN) 25 Marietta Br., Atlanta, Ga.
wSg
I i Health ©Us how. 50c. Helper a year. DC njj
-- — . ,3
Patent medicines differ—
One has reasonableness, an¬
other has not. One has re epu-
tation—another has not. One
has confidence, bom of suc-
cess — another has only
“ hopes.”
Don’t take it for granted
that all patent medicines are
alike. They are not.
Let the years of uninter-
rupted success and the tens
of thousands of cured and
happy men and women, place
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical
Discovery and Dr. Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription
on the side of the comparison
they belong.
And there isn’t a state or
territory, in no the — world, nor hardly a
country whether
its people realize it or not,
but have men and women
in them that’re happier be¬
their cause effects. of their discovery and
Think of this in health.
Think of it in sickness. And
then think whether you can
afford to make the trial if
the makers can afford to take
the risk to give your money
back as they do if they do
not benefit or cure you.
P ISO'S CURE FOR
Best Cough Medicine. Iteeommcndod agreeable by Physicians. to the
Cures where all else fails. Pleasant and
taste. Children take it without objection. By druggists.
CONSU M PT IO N
MLSW?1!S»hi SUCCESSFUL!
RELIABLE. DURABLE, WORK and
They do MOKE -
make Git EATER PROFIT.
They FIN 1811 Well* where
others FAIL! Any size, 2
inches to 44 inches diameter. Catalogue
LCOMiS & NYMAN, OHIO.^j M WS> fpeki
tiffin. -
mi
fiARfH unilHiltUkOi Bend particular for catalogue style and wanted. mention
W. H. GKA Y, ‘JO A *2*2 Wooster St., N. Y. City.
........Fifeen. ’91
ro
03
O.
Cr>