Newspaper Page Text
FOR FARM AND GARDEN.
EARTH-WORMS.
Numbered with tho numerous pre¬
ventives and cures for earth-worms in
flower pots, is the following:
To keep earth-worms out of flower
pots, pour on tho soil a warm (80 to
90 degrees Fahrenheit) decoction of
quassia or wormwood and powdered
horse chestnuts, In a few moments
every worm will come to the surfaco
and can bo removed.—[New York
World.
OSAGE HEDGES.
Osngc orange hedges aro best thick¬
ened by cutting back whilo one to two
feet high, and continually trimmed
to keep them within bounds; it ia
less work to splash or lay them
down at four feet than to cut back;
try both.
In splashing bond tiie bush one
way mid cut half off so it will
lay dowu and yet retain vitality
enough to grow shoots straight up
from the tops that aro down.
O.ngc it such a rank grower nnd
gross feeder, it is difficult to make it
ornamental and requires careful atten¬
tion iu tlio early growth to get a good
stand to make a good fence slock
proof; there is always a gap some¬
where to patch up with boards, unless
great card is taken while young ; prune
any time, but splash die early part of
March, before growth.— [Farm, Field
and Stockman.
HOW TO TRAIN A COLT.
A colt should be put in induing as
soon as it is bo; n. It should bo thus
early made acquainted with its owner,
nnd especially with the person who
will use it. If Ibis is n woman, she
should be with it frequently and make
a pet of it. As soon as it will cat
oats tho owner should teach it to take
some from the hand, and it should
then be taught its name. As it grows
this acquaintance should be kept up,
nnd in every way possible it should be
made tame and gentle. In time it
should be taught the use of the bridle
nnd bit nnd to carry a light saddle on
its back, nnd if (he side saddle will bo
used, some time later it should be used
to the liuiigling skirt. A small boy
may ride it ns soon as it is strong
enough, and everything should be
done to avoid having it frightened by
auything. At first it should bo walked
about and turned hither and thither to
learn the u*o of the bit. Then, by
continuing the gentle training when
it comes to be used, it will be entirely
safe nnd gentle. To make a friend
and acquaintance of a horse is.to save
a great deni of tronhic afterwnrd and
to d««ble (he viiluo of tho animal.—
[New York Tribune.
FARMERS BOARDING HORSES.
In many places, especially near
cities, farmers have moro calls to win¬
ter favorile horses than they can at¬
tend to. It docs not seem to be un¬
derstood that the keep of a horse near
a city or laige village is worth much
more than it is at a greater distance,
When such horses are sent into the
country 10 ta 15 miles from any su-
ti«n, they can be kept very cheaply, ns j
low as $1 a week, and from that up j
to ?2 or e2.60, according to feed and i
care given. At §1 a week tho animal j
will probably he turned to the siraw j
stack, with only a little hay per day j
and no grain. In that way it will
need or rather get no care excepting
the daily hay ration. It will not be
in very good condition in (he spring.
We have often thought when wc
have seen fanners thus wintering
stock, whether they could not dis; osc
of surplus grain and hay by purchas¬
ing thrifty animals and making all
limy gained or produced during the
winter. It is here that tho extra value
snd cost of hoarding horses near a
city comes in. What will keep a horse
in good order will support a milch
sow Her milk can usually be sold if
near the city to milkmen for much
more than the horse owner is willing
to pay. Tho cow if properly fed will
make as much and ns valuable manure.
There is only the extra labor of milk¬
ing to Imj considered in estimating the
diflercncc between tho two. — [Boston
Cultivator.
GRAFTING wax.
Tiiere are many kinds of grafting
wax as well as other compositions for
Ihe same purpose. For grafting in the
open air,orfor root grafting apple seed¬
lings during ihe winter, as practised
by nurserymen, we prefer a wax
made of the following materials in
the prportions given: Common rosin,
four parts; beeswax, two parts; clean
beef or mutton tallow, one pan;
melt together, and when cool work
up into rolls. If to be used in r ol
grafting, it may lie spread while hot
upon moderately thin, but lough man-
iia paper, tliis,paper when cool to be
cut up into strips of convenient size
for use. Thin cloili may be u-ed in-
stead of paper, but the paper will usu-
ally answer every pur; ote, costs
less than the cloth, und yields
more readily to pressure as the
stocks enlarge by growth. One pint
of linseed oil may be substituted for
each pound of tallow, aud while some
prefer wax made with oil others do
not. A liquid-grafting wax may be
made by melting together one pound
each of rosin ami tallow. Whan
soo’.ed down add a spoonful of mr-
pen tine and four ounces of ttlcobpl
and two of waler. Heat again and
stir briskly until all lugrodiouts aro
thoroughly mixed. This wax mutt bo
kept in bottles nnd applied with a
stiff brush. If you prefer to use a
liquid wax or the hard wax melted
on your npplo grafts, (lien you will
find nothing better for airings to hold
the cions iu [place than rullla, a m.v
terial now in use among nurserymen,
although bnas bark will answer almost
us well, but it is not quite as soft.—
[New York Sun.
poultry ox tiie farm.
Most farmers consider poultry on
the farm more of a nuisance than a
benefit and only tolerate fowls on the
farm bccuuso the old women like to
Imvo them around, writes Aunt Betsy,
in the Farmer and Breeder. Such
men cither forget or iguoro the fact
that the good house-wifo aud her
chickens supply most of the necessa¬
ries, such as coffee, tea, sugar, etc. j Q
Were it not for this despised source
of supply the husband would have to
provide the hard casii for the “store
goods” or go without them and any
one that lives ou a farm knows that
there are times when it is difiieult to
get ready money. But fresh eggs and
poultry will always bring the casii no
difference what time in the year.
But there is a clnss of progressive
farmers who have discovered and will
acknowledge that poultry is of great
value on the farm, and every year wc
find a few more going into tho busi¬
ness and trying to “grade up,” as
they call it, by having a few ihorongh-
bred roosters.
We find a few more willing to take
poultry papers and learn from others
that have made it a success, but it i 9
very hard to get some people out of
the old rut. “You can’t tell me any¬
thing about raising chickens, the old
dung hill is just as good as you 1 ’
thoroughbred. I'he trees are good
enough for hens to roost in.” The
hen is kicked about if she comes into
tho barn, and all she gets to eat is
what she steals; then if she don’t
lay—“Chickens don’t pay.”
Try building a hon hou3e, one that
is comfortable and warm, give tho
hens (lie same care other stock gets,
supply them with green food, such as
turnips, onions and potatoes, gome
times cooked and nt others simply
chopped or mashed; plenty of char¬
coal, lime, gravel or broken shells, all
of which the farmer can get with a
little trouble generally on his own
farm, aud then with plenty of milk
and fresh witter, my word for it, they
-Will pay better than any stock you
have on the farm.
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
Cut your cions before it i9 too late.
Get out manure while the ground is
frozen. Spread it on grass land.
l)o not feed too much corn. Wheat,
buckwheat, oats and barley are betlet
foods and not so fattening.
Always keep houses clean and well
whitewashed; also see that all coopi
and drinking utensils are clean.
One good all-around variety of fow'
j a best to begin with; never at-
tempt more than two varieties ou auy
account.
Weed out the birds as soon as possi¬
ble; never keep birds that nre not up
to standard when advertising—some
one will tee them.
Perches should be rubbed with kero¬
sene weekly. Once a month burn
fnmigators iu the building; sulphur
docs as well as anything.
Origin of “Dollar.”
Few persons have ever troubled
thrtuselvcs to think of the derivation
of the word dollar. It is from the
German ilinl (valley) and came into
use in this way some 300 years ago.
There is a little silver-mining city or
district in Northern Bohemia called
Joacliimslhal, or Joachim's Valley.
The reigning duke of the region
authorized this city in tho sixteenth
century to coin a silver piece, which
was called “Joachimsthnler.” Tlio
word “joachim” was soon dropped and
ihe name “thaler” only remained.
The piece went into general use in
Germany and Denmark, where the
orthography was changed to “dnler,”
whence it came into English aiul was
adopted by our forefathers with still
further changes iu the spelling. The
Mexican dollar is generally called
“piastre” in France and the name is
sometimes applied to our own dollar.
The appellation is imorrect in either
case, for the word piaster or piastra
lias for the been only
applied with correctness to a small
silver coin used in Turkey and Egypt,
which is worth from 5 to 8 cents.—
[Chicago Tribune.
A Carpenter’s Rise In Life.
II. C. Brown of Denver has now
1 nearly completed tho finest hotel west
! of tiie Mississippi River at a cost of
i $1,500,000. Ho lias paid $250,000
j for the furniture aud $36,000 for the
| silver service. Yet when lie landed
in Colorado ill 1859 lie was without a
, dollar, and as the little mining cainp
was beginning to be bu ll up he made
his living by following bis trade as a
carpeuter. He then took 160 acres of
laud at a spot uear what is now known
as Capital Hi 1 ut $1.25 an acre. That
lot is today worth $5,000,000, and
Brown is about the richest mmi iu the
Slate. — f Globe-Democrat.
WORLD’S FAIR NOTES.
An East Indian village and exhibit will
occupy 290,000 square test of space on
Midway Plaisance.
The Canadian Pacific railway will ex¬
hibit at the fair a model passenger train
and also models of the fine ocean steamers
in that company’s service.
The Silk Association of America and
tho Silk Industry association have deci¬
ded to combine in making the finest
I ossible exhibit of silk goods and pro¬
ducts.
One of the attractive features of the
Australian exhibit at the fair will be tree
The ferns from Sidney, New South Wales.
ferns vary in height from eight to
fourteen feet.
A choral building, 160 by 260 feet,and
costing $100,000, will be erected uear
Ilorticu tural hall. It will be devoted to
musical attractions, chiefly largo cho¬
ruses.
It is proposed to rua from New York
to Chicago at the time of the dedication
of the exposition building, ten special
trains, ten minutes apart, each tram to
have elaborate decorations and music.
A herd of live elk will be taken from
Idaho to the exposition. In the Mont¬
ana exhibit will be shown about one
hundred specimens of wild animals and
birds, native to that state, and set up by
a skilled taxidermist.
The corporation of the rifle manufac¬
turers at Liege, Belgium, has addressed
a petition to the government asking for
a subsidy to enable it to make a worthy
exhibit of its braoch of industry at the
Chicago exposition.
The Methodists have decided to hold
an international camp meeting of a
month’s duration at the time of the ex¬
position. ft will be held half the time
at Despaines and the other h .If at Lake
Bluff. Both places are a few miles out
from Chicago.
The Italian government has selected its
warship, Americi, to convey to the
United States the Italian exhibits to the
exposition free of charge. Toe Rome
chamber of commerce has invited other
chambers to f rm committees to promote
thesecuring of Italian exhibits.
The secretary of the treasury has in
structcd collectors of customs at all
United States ports that ihe transporta¬
tion of articles intended for exhibit at
the exposition must be facilitated iu
preference to all other importation!.
Exhibits from foreign ports are already
beginning to arrive at New York in con
si d era ble numbers.
Questions Often Asked.
Q. What is Alabastine? coating
A. Alabastine is a durable for
•vails and ceilings.
Q. Is it the same as kalsomines?
A. It is entirely different from all other
preparations Q. IVherein on does the it market. differ from these
kal¬
somines on tho market?
A. It is made from a cement that goes
through a process of setting on the wall, aud
grows harder with age.
Q. What are kalsomines made from?
A. From whitings, chalks, clays or other
inert powders for a base, and are entirely
depen lent upon glue to hold them on tho
wall. ___—
Q, Why do kaisomines rub and scale?
A. Because the glue, being unimai matter!
decays in a short time by exposure to ab¬
end moisture, and the binding qualities of
the material are then gone.
Q. Does tho Alabastine contain any in¬
jurious substance?
A. Alabastine has been most carefully
tested, and is recommended by leading sani¬
tarians throughout the country, on account
of its sanitary nature. investigation
Q. What regarding has the same
shown wall paper?
A. Sanitarians condemn, in strong terms,
the use of wall paper for walls of living
rooms, on account of the poison used in its
manufacture.
Q. Can anything but plain work be done
with Alabastine?
A. Any kind of work, from plain tinting
to the most elaborate decorating can be
done.
Q. How can I learn to do this work and
decorate my bouse?
A. By writing the Alabastine Company,
Grand and Rapids, Mich., for book illustration of instruc¬
tions suggestions, and of
stencils; also showing six sets of tinted wall
designs, sent free.
A Lotion for Chilblains.
If in spite of all precautions with chilblains
appear, bathe the hands a ]>tion
made of one part spirits of wine and five
parts spirits of rosemary, rubbing the
parts affected briskly with tire hands to
create a friction. This lotion should be
qhilblains applied every will disappear two hours. after Usually few the
a ap-
plications.—New York Tribune.
9 *■
1
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A
mix •k\
r HI 1
< 3^
K\
3Ir. Itobert IF. Denvtr
Two Christmas Dinners
In ’90 a Smell was Enough
In ’91 a Cood Appetite
The Change IFris llue to Hood's
Sarsa par Ilia.
“ Christmas Day, Dec. 25,1891.
“ C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.
“ I have been reading in a paper to-day about
Hood's Sarsaparilla being a cure for
And I know Dyspepsia that it is true. A year tho
npo
smell of ray Christmas dinner was enough for
me, but this year 1 find that I want more
than a smell,and I give Hood's Sarsaparilla
the credit for the change in my feelings. For
the last t wo years 1 liavo been troubled with
dyspepsia, and could find no cure for it. My
friends told me that if l went to would Europe, sea-
sfc-kness, change, of air and diet cure me,
1 went to Ireland and remained the t hree sum¬
mer months of this year, *91, and came back in
Sept ember uncured. My blood was
watery and i was told to take HoodsSar-
sapurulX 1 found that for it. 1 did so, and in one month I
Hood’s Cures Sarsaparilla
Both poor blood and dyspepsia, for I am now
perfectly well and have not taken any
other medicine since I came home.” Kobt.W
Dbnvik, 238 Franklin St., Astoria, Long Island
City, y. Y.
Pills ____________ family cathartic,
Hood's are the best
gentle and effective.
FROM THE “PACIFIC JOURNAL.”
“A great invention has been made by Dr.
Tutt, That eminent chemist has produced
Ms Hair Dye
which Imitates nature to perfection; It acts
Instantaneous*v and is perfectly l*uek Place, harmless.*’ N, V,
Price. SI. Office, .3ft & 41
QUAINT AND CURIOUS.
Toll bridges still exist in Kentucky
and in Maine.
A deed dated in 1759 and convey¬
ing u farm of 100 acres was recently
placed on record at Norristown, Penn.
Eighty per cent, of college editors
adopt journalism as tneir profession.
TJio Druids Held many plants sa¬
cred, as, for instance, vervain, selago,
mistletoe, and, among trees, the oak
and the rowan.
They nre telling a story in Galvcs.
ton of how a Texas pony found llio
watch lost by its owner and brought
it to him in its mouth.
A cat recently killed a flvc-foot n i-
gator in Florida. It jumped on the
reptile nnd bit through the tender hide
of fHe neck until it reached a vital
part
The great bell of Moscow, moulded
in miniature form in Russian china, is
a new ornament for tHe buffet, which
gives a fashionable Russian cast to the
room.
A midget from Holland, twen y-
fonr years old and now on exhibition
in Berlin, is said to bn the smallest
man in the world, lie is exactly two
feet tall. , -
Medical c'rc’cs in Geiniany are
much interested in the case of a
Silosian miner who lias been asleep in
a hospital for live months, and who
defies all efforts to wake him.
The Hampton family of Roswell,
Ga., possesses a cow’s horn hat that
lias been in the family sinco 146:5.
The hat was carried through ttie
Revolutionary war by a Hampton.
A Mexican, while walking along
the placer diggings nt Qnijotoa, Ari¬
zona, which Had been washed out by
the late lain?, saw a dingy yellow
lump sticking out of the sand and
kicked it lose. It. was a nugget
weighing 11 ounces and worth $200.
Tho irregularity of Maine’s coast
line is indicated by the fact that a Lu-
beck man who bought a horse in East-
port was obliged to drive the animal
more than forty miles to reach hia
home, although the two towns are
only three miles apart in a straight
line.
The most useful war vessel in the
world is Swedish, avers the New York
Commercial Advertiser. She combines
the capabilities of a gunboat, torpedo
boat, wrecking lug, ice smasher, fire
engine, repair shop and fresh water
distillery. But Sweden is poor and
must practice economy.
It has been discovered that silver
exists in the ashes of two volcanoes in
the Andes of Ecuador, in South
America. The quantity of silver is
sxceedingly minute, however, being
about two-fifths of an ounce to a ton
of ashes at Cotopaxi and about three-
tenths of an ounce at Tunguragua.
The Fans are the only people in
equatorial Africa who have a cur¬
rency, and they are strong monomet¬
allists. The money is of iron,
wrought into pieces resembling rusty
hairpins with flat heads. They are
I ut up in bundles;of ten, and a hun¬
dred bundles is the market price for a
wife.
In Missouri Aliev have little family
savings banks in the horfies of the peo¬
ple, given by one of tho banks of St.
Joseph. At stated intervals a repre¬
sentative of tho bank comes around
with the key, counts the money in the
presence of the depositors, takes it
away and gives them credit for tho
amount.
Formerly sites for furnaces were
often selected with a view to material
being brought to the tops of the fur
naces without any expenditure of
power; nowadays the sites are chosen
so as to admit of ready removal of the
iron and slag in large quantities with¬
in a limited time, plenty of room and
good drainage.
Watches were appreciably reduced
in size after the invention of the fusee
to obviate the inconvenience of varia¬
tions of power of tho mainspring.
The watches made early in the six¬
teenth century generally strongly con¬
trasted in size and portability with
those worn in fobs by men in tli’o
eighteenth century, and which were
round, thick and hoavy.
A Wreck-Indicating Buoy.
A new dovico to indicate the posi¬
tion of wrecks by A. F. Ward of De¬
troit, Midi., consists of a hollow ball
of two halves, tho bottom one being
attached ton be l by a soluble glue
joint. This bed is iixod to an iron
plate which is screwed to (ho deck of
tho vessel or in any suitable position.
As soon ns tho dissolution takes place
tho buoy rises, a cord, which can be
of any length—1000 feet and upward
—and which is fixed on a reel in the
hollow ball, reels off through the
bottom of the ball. As soon as the
latter reaches the surface the line
stops paying out, the core of the reel
being controlled by springs. The
Boluable joint is protected by a flange,
which prevents water reaching it be¬
fore the buoy has been submerged for
some time, seas washing over the
deck having no effect on it. The
soluble joint can be arranged to
solve within any time desired from
twenty-four to forty-eight hours, and
the cord may be replaced by copper
wire when used in salt water.—
(Scientific American.
A Game of Robbing.
An s’mond grower of this locality hit
upon a nice device for gathering and thus early his crop. be¬
His trees boro largely,
came kown to the yellow hammers,a spe¬
cies of the woodpecker tribe of birds,and
they had regularly stored away large
quantities of ripe nuts takeu from the
orchard in the limb of an oak tree near
by. The astute orchardist watched op¬
erations, and at last hit upon a novel nut
and labor saving plan, andiie lost no
time in putting it into execution.
The limb vas sawed from the tree and
replaced by a square shaped the funnel ground; long
enough to nearly reach a
bucket was then set underneath. A gen¬
uine robbing game then went merrily on.
The birds gathered the nuts, which they
dropped into the funnel and down into
(he bucket below, and as regularly as
night came the nlmond grower would in
his turn empty it of its contents and set
it buck for u new supply. This kept up
until the entire crop had been had gathered, departed
and the yellow hammers
broken hearted at the heartless deception
practiced upon them.—Sutter City En¬
terprise.
Had Tried One.
Mrs. Wayback (at _a dime museum)—
‘I aud s.kes! And was that mau really
skinned alive? Dear me! How did the
savages do it?”
Mr. Wayback—“I s’pose they covered
him with porous plasters, Manda, and
then pulled ’em off.” — New York
Weekly.
A Good Reason.
Little Boy—"Gan your sister play?”
Little Girl—“No, she makes awful
noi?es w’en she tries.”
Little Boy—“Then wot did your papa
get her a piano for?”
Little Girl—“I dunno. I guess it was
’cause he wanted zee box for a coal bin.”
—Street & Smiih’s Good News.
fcjTATB OP OHIO, CITY OP UOLEDO, 1 f
Lucas County, “•
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the
senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney &
Co., County doing and business in the City of Toledo,
State aforesaid, and that said firm
will pay the sum of $100 for each and every
case of catarrh that cannot be cured by the
use of Hall's Catarrh Cure.
Frank J. Cheney.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in m
presence, this Oth day of December, A. D., 1880.
A. W. Gusason,
seal
„. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken Notary internally Public. and
acta of the directly on the blood and mucous surfaces
system. Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0.
PT Sold by Druggists. 75c._
The Only One Ever Printed.
CAN YOU PINO THE WORD?
There is a 3 inch display advertisement In
this paper, this week, which has no two words
alut e except one word. The same is true of
each new one appearing each week, from The
Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house places a
"Crescent” on everything they make and pub¬
lish. Look for it. send them the name of the
word and they will return you book, beauti-
PUL LITHOGRAPHS or SAMPLES FREE.
and never in a single instance failed to obtain
immediate relief rrom headache when direc¬
tions were followed.” Fifty cents, at dnXh
stores.
Hut one upon earth is more beautiful and
better than the wife—that is the mother.
For impure or thin Blood, Weakness, Mala¬
ria Neuralgia, Indigestion, and Biliousness,
take Brown’s Iron Bitters—it gives strength,
making old persons feel young—and young
persons strong; pleasant to take.
There is a past which is gone forever. But
there is a future which is still our own.
In 1850 “Brown’s Bronchial Troches” were
introduced, and their success as a cure for
been Colds, unparalleled, Coughs, Asthma, and Bronchitis has
FITS stopped free by Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first dav’s
use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and S3 tria
bottle free. Dr. Kline. 931 Arch St., Phila.. Pa
The progress of science in medicine has prof
duced nothing better for human ills than the
celebrated Beecham’s Pills. 25 cents a box.
Advice to Women
If you would protect Profuse, yourself Scanty,
from Painful,
Suppressed or Irregular Men¬
struation you must use
BRADFIELD’S
FEMALE
REGULATOR
Cartersville, April 20,1886.
B5 ."a KK.-i.tr KSSE
effect is truly wonderful. J. W. STRANGE.
Book to " WOMAN ” mailed FREE, wl hicti contalna
valuable Information on all femal ,e diseases.
bradfield REGULATOR CO.,
ATLANTA, GA.
NOB BALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
Kennedy’s
MedicalDiscovery this order:
Takes hold ia
Bowels,
Liver,
Inside Kidneys, Skin,
Outside Skin,
Driving everything before it that ought to * e out.
You know whether
you need it or not.
Sold by every druggist, and manufactured by
DONALD KENNEDY,
ItOXBUttY, MASS._
44 German
Two Syrup"
bottles of German Syrup
cured me of Hemorrhage of the
Lungs when other remedies failed.
I am a married man and, thirty-six
years of age, and live with my wife
and two little girls at Durham, Mo.
I have stated this brief and plain so
that all may understand. My case
was a bad one, and I shall be glad
to tell anyone about it who will
write me. Philip L- Schenck, P.
O. Box45, April 25, 1890. No man
could ask a more honorable, busi¬
ness-like statement.
KEYSTONE
j
LOADER
Loads a ton in S minutes.
Saves time, work, men,
hay. stronz, durable, light
draft Send for description.
KEYSTONE M’f’fi CO.,
Sterling, III,
The Pipe Col am bus Smoked.
Robert Fullerton, of the Old Curiosity
Shop the in New York city, claims handed to have
pipe of peace that was to
Columbus when he first set foot on
American soil after leaving the good ship
Santa Maria. The pipe is made out of a
peculiar kind of bamboo, very common
in San Salvador.
The bowl is very large, showing that
in those days the people must have been
great smokers, or, rather, perhaps, that
it was a for fete pipe, whole nnd assemblage contained enough
tobacco a to smoke,
The stem surmounting the bowl is fash¬
ioned out of a peculiar reed, and is
quaintly of carved which with holes incomprehensible, on the side,
the use is
It might aptly be called a flute pipe, for
if the stem were t ,ken out of the bowl
and 1 he mouthpiece plugged it could be
used as a flute.-Collector.
Business Men Xeed Not Drudge.
“It does seem strange to me,” said ex-
Congressman West the other day, “why
some business men dinar closely to busi¬
ness all their lifetime. You laugh? Well,
business is business, of course, and Ben
Franklin knew what he was talking about
when be said something about saving a
penny every time you got a chance. But
what I mean to say is that a business
man needn’t be everlastingly 1 drudging
away simply because he is making lots of
money. He should take a holiday often,
and at t mes a jolly long one.”—New
York Herald.
For Dyspepsia, Indigestion, and Stomach
disorders, Use Brown’s Iron Bitt rs. The Best
Tonic, It rebuilds tho system, cleans the Blood
Srsf s SatSUor na ‘ dton -
-
To'ilnd one good'Tyou'mu^t'a hui’dred'try'* 11 ^
son’sEy^^mter.iiriSi^StesSisuitoperbottie!
T 5
)V m
xM ML :
ONE ENJOYS
Both the method and result* when
and Syrup refreshing of Figs i* taken; the it i« pleasant
to taste, and act*
gently Liver and yet promptly Bowels, cleanses on the Kidneys,
the sys¬
aches tem effectually, and fevers dispels and colds, habitual head¬
cures
constipation. only remedy &yrup its kind of Figs i* the
of ever pro¬
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac¬
its ceptable action to and the stomach, beneficial prompt its in
effects, prepared truly only from the «s most
healthy excellent and agreeable qualities substances, commend its it
man y
to all and have made it the most
popular Syrup remedy of Figs k nown. is for sale in 50c
and $1 bottles by all leading drug¬
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO
SAM FRANCISCO, CAL, N.r.
LOUISVILLE. KV. new resit
Dr. S. C. Parsons,
Blood Purifier.
0 Cnre3 Syphilis, Itch, Hu-
more, Swellings, atism, Skin Pimples, Dis¬
eases, Rheum
Scrofula. Malaria, Catarrh,
Fevers, Liver and Kidney
Diseases, Old Sores, Erupt¬
ions and all disorders result¬
ing trom impure blood.
Price $1.00.
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS,
Dr. S. C. Parsons, ‘‘Family
Physician” tells how to get well and keep well:
400 pages, profusely illustrated. §3"For pam¬
phlets,question lists,or private information free
of charge, address with stamp,
DU. S. C. PARSONS, Savannah, lia.
fl*
and Paints which stain
'iTlwLut, Odor-
less, Durable, and tho consumer pays lor no tin
or glas‘i package with every purchase.
Sf P rtonmcI A i?vVr L !n% TE&ta!*
d purify the blood, are safe andef-I
fectual. medicine The best general family ®
S known for Biliousness,®
Constipation, Breatb, Headache, Dyspepsia, Heartburn.Loss# Foul®
«
J
•blood, Sto perform or a failure their by the functions. stomach, liver Persons or intestines® givenAo•
2 over-eating benefited proper by taking TABILE after?
are a
jS&’SSfc Agents Wanted; EIGHT? per cent profit. ®
®
'»Sv
•Consumptives aiid people
who have weak lunge or Asth¬
ma, should use Piso’s Cure for
Consumption. It has cured
thousands. It has not injur¬
ed one. It Is not bad to take.
It is the best cough syrup.
Sold everywhere. *5c.
r
KING COTTON
Buy or sell your Cotton on JONES
M IP 11 f&5-Ton Cotton Scale.
HOT CHEAPEST BUT BEST,
III nk B If H For terms address
” JOOTSB OF BINGHAMTON,
V BINGHAMTON^ V.
ItfATER HYACINTH—1 for 15c.; 2for 25c;
W Orchid Canua, 10c. each; Yellow Jasamtne,l for
15c.; 2 f or 25c. Mjfs Clara Slough, Daytona, Fla.
T HE COST IS THE SAME.
A A t \\/00D ■piCKET5.
o v rjS
■>S ( - A •« j aPTMcSn Jti'i $
The Hartman Steel Picket Fence
Ea s«fflfars^JiSSHH^abs« -■
*
m
I
!S> %
k
COPYRli
—Dr. Pierce’s < Golden Heads off
disease _ Med-
ical Discovery. In a way, that you
can understand, too, by purifyinv
the blo( ^ W h e n you’re weak
dull and languid, or when blotches
and eruptions it, appear — that’s the
time to take no matter what the
season. It’s easier to prevent than
to have to cure.
For all diseases caused by a tor¬
pid liver or impure Scrofulous, blood, lJyspep.
sia, Biliousness, Skin, or
„ Scalp . Diseases ^ — even Consumption
( or Lung the - scrofula), Discovery in its tho earlier
stages, “ is only
remedy benefit that’s guaranteed. If it
does’nt or cure, you h3ve
your money back,
You pay only for the good you
get,
The proprietors ‘ of Dl’. Sage -P S Ca-
tarrll .___« V, Remedy , . 1 lose ___ $o00 S . M it you’re ,
! lse 10t to cured pay of you Cata that [ rh - ..1\ey if they prom- cant
Cure you. What do V OU lose by
it? Is there anythiug to
risk, except your Catarrh?
AN ASTONISHING
TONIC FOR WOMEN.
McELREE’S
OF
It Strengthens the Weak, Quiets the
Nerves, Suffering Relieves and Cures Monthly
FEMALE DBSEA8ES.
ASK YOUR DRUGGIST ABOUT IT.
$1.00 PER BOTTLE.
CHATTANOOGA MED. CO., Chattanooga, Tenn,
m §#■ r*
if!
«*{
;
!
RELIEVES all Stomach Distress.
REMOVES Nausea, Seaso of Fullnes:.,
Congestion, Pain.
REVIVES Failing ENERGY.
RESTORES Normal Circulation, and
Warms to Toe Tips,
OR. HARTER MEOICINS CO., St. Louis, Me.
GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 1878.
wTbaker & CO.’S
Breakfast Cocoa
from which the excess of oil
has been removed,
J* absolutely pure and
m Chemicals it is soluble .
- No
l are used in its prepara - ion. It
has more than three times the
I H || strength Starch, Arrowroot of Cocoa mixed Sugar, with
or
jgli !jl || Domical, and ia therefore costing far less more than eco-
one
djifiP cent a cup. Itis delicious, nour-
ishing, strengthening, easily
digested, and ndmirably adapted for invalids
as well as for pers ons in h ealth.
Sold by grocers ev erywhere.
W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass.
Jackson’s
Wonder THE GREATEST Introduction
Bean. Vegetable
For 3fa»y Years.
It is a Bunch Bean. Prolific, Sweet, Rich
Flavor, good for the Table and fine for Forage,
A combination Snap, Lima ana Butter Beall,
25c. per Paper, by Mail. Special rales to
Alliance Seed Organization*. Catalogue. Send
for
MARK. f. JOHNSON SEED CO.
35 S. PRYOR St. ATLANTA, Qa.
A Sample Cake of Soap and 128
Book oil bernmtologjy
feSoAp lM ^—US
jSBfe Birth Marks, Mol a
W " arts, India Ink and
/ / ArhCAyi/nU r, Fovder Aiarks, Scars, Pit-
Sftl Stiffs tings, Redness of Nose.Su-
jWi John periluous II. Bair, Woodbury, Pimples.
and jlpZtiP Dermatologist, 1*25 W.
/S> A bright, energetic man oi
gP f|| \J H ■Bug sole woman agency wauled for to take " the
t ru l
*r that is needed in every
home and indiepensa-
Jfi ble SELLS in every AT. SI«*HT, office. in
£• w town days or and country. Steady b700ra '
90 a inco mo a”
A M M ■■■ flfk afterward. A "Bonanza” Good
fSVS IL. for the right person. and
W tss» w® h aa jobs taken. are scarce Write at once.
soon Springfield, Ohio.
J. W . JONES, Manager,
--
KNSIONS— llue nil SOLDIERS! H. d >»-
•vilod. White S2 Fon.fjwvs. Fee far increase. A. W Met 2*>l{cng OK WiV'C IIC K a, L
.
SONS, Wash ington. !>■ A Cincinnati, O.
A. N. XJ ............Seventeen ’92.