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# FOR FARM AND GARDEN.
HOW SALT HF.LPR TROTS.
The value of salt as a fertilizer de¬
pends less on what it furnishes than
on the soil fertility it makes available.
Most farmers, who liavo used mineral
fertilizers, especially phosphates, for
a series ot years liavo a lot of unus¬
able fertility stored in tlicir soiis. An
application of salt early in tho season
may do ns much good for a year or
two as llio inoro costly fertilizer they
have been accustomed to use.— [Bos¬
ton Cultivator.
THE COST OK A CREAMERY.
Tlie Dairy Commissioner of Con-
nect'cut lias compiled a report show¬
ing tho cost of creameries iu that
State. Many of the creameries have
living rooms in the second story, iu
which live tho bultcnnakcr's family.
Tho average cost of the creamery
buildings in that State was n littlo less
than $3000, including nil apparatus
for complete work. Hoard’s Dairy¬
man, commenting on tlie foregoing,
•ays: Communities about to establish
creameries should not be led into
wasteful expense. Every cheese fac¬
tory in tlie country, however, should
:ost double what it has, which cost
ihou’d be expended in the curing
room and in making things neat about
the premises.
PROTECT SMALL HESS.
Small hens may be active layers, but
If tbe market is going to be flooded
wilh small eggs, tho egg-weighing bill
willsoou be in order. Small chickens
should never be fed or kept with the
older ones, as they are apt to bo in¬
jured. Have two or three yards, and
lepnrntc them according to age ami
strength. When tho comb of a fowl
is largo nnd bright colored, showing
it to bo full of blood, ami slinking
with every activity of the bird, site is
in a healthy, laying condition. If tho
sdges of the comb are a purplish rod
snd the movements sluggish, there is
liscase aud danger. Most diseases of
aouliry are directly traceable to filth.
Try to clean up onco a week, and see
f the effect is not wholesome. Earth
Boor is best for the poultry-house. A
:ement surface underneath possesses
the advantage of perfect dryness for
die extra cost; but it is not difficult to
tcep your earth floor reasonably dry,
providod you raise a mound of earth
for the house to stand on, ami sur-
round it with a ditch to catch the
•aim—[New York Observer.
A FAMILY HORSE.
There is much difference of opinion
as !o what this horse should be. Of
oouise what would suit one family
will r.ot suit some other, but all will
agreo lliat a family horse sliou'd ho
ono very gentle, especially where there
are women and children to handle and
care for him. Next lie need not be
fast, but well broken, both to harness
and saddle, single and double. Wo
like to see a liovsc that will permit nil
(he children to r’de him two or three
al a time, or that tho wife enn drive
with all the little children in the buggy
or carnage, aud one that will obey
the voice at once. The value of such
a horse cennot be estimated in dollars.
Tlie doctor’s horse ought to be a reg¬
ular family horse, as it has to stand
hitched at all times and nt all places.
Ho should have in addition to the
shove speed, great endurance nnd be
perfectly gentle. A farmer’s wife
frequently lias great enjoyment with
Ihe gentle old family horse, ready and
willing to take her and the youngor
members of the family any distance
snd anywhere in perfect safety—ono
that the least boy or girl can harness
without fear and without interrupting
the farm hands. Such an animal
should bo on most farms where
there arc children.— [Indiana Farmer.
IS ING T1IF, HARROW.
Bolh in preparing the soil for plant¬
ing and in tlie cultivation of the dif¬
ferent crops, the harrow can nearly
always be used to a good advantage.
Under ordinary conditions the harrow
is an economical tool, nnd for this
reason it can often be nso . much inoro
largely than it is.
It is important with nil crops to
havo tho soil in a good tilth before
plnnti ig the seed, and in finishing this
work the harrow can always be used
more or loss to an ml vantage. It is
too often the case that sufficient har¬
rowing is not given.
Generally the sooner the harrow is
used ufter the soil is stirred with tlie
plough or cultivator tho better. In
many cases the land is ploughed iu
Ihe fall, and in the spring ullthntis
necessary is to work ihe surface with
a disc harrow or cultivator and then
finish willi the spike-tooth harrow.
In the preparation of tlie soil for
the seed it is often tho last working
that pays the best. A fine seed bed
not only gives a belter germination,
but leaves tlie soil in a better condi¬
tion to commence the cultivation
sarly, while it affords much better op¬
portunity for the plants to mak* a
good growth.
By having the soil in a good tilth
when the seed is planted the work of
sultivating can begin as 6oon as the
stherwork will permit after planting.
By doing this not only will the weeds
>edestroyed more readily, but (he sod
:an be kept iu a good tilth much
t&sier.
While destroying the weeds and
giving clean cultimtiou is one essen¬
tia! item, It is lutt all; keeping the
soil flno and mellow is equally im¬
portant. In many cases the first har¬
rowing may bo given before the plants
show above ground. In most cases
there are a number of difforont kinds
of wood seeds that will germinate in
a less time than is required for corn,
enne or potatoes, and these will he de¬
stroyed if proper care Is taken by
using tbo burrow early.
Ono advantage In using the harrow
(wo or “■« >'»«•
with the cultivator is that it destroys
llio weeds more thoroughly closo
around ,i ti e plants . . , than ,, almost , , any
other implement (hat can be used. If
l he weeds can ho kept down at the
start and llio soil made fine and mcl-
. ,
' 1 * u ’° 0 s,cuieft
mote vigorous start to grow, and then
by using (ho cultivator this growth
may much more readily be maintained,
But if the plants get stunted in the
early stages of growth no after work¬
ing will entirely" remove the effect,
lienee the importance of early, thor-
ough tvoik.—[St. Louis Republic.
variety ok food koh stock.
The domestic animals, no less than
man, require a varioty of food to
make healthful and nutritious diet.
Watch a horse or cow feeding in
pastures wilh various grasses. It is
rare that one alone will bo eaten unless
it is better than the olhors. There will
he a bit here and another there, mak¬
ing altogether a more palutablc mouth¬
ful than could cither be alone. In the
6tnhlos this choice is not often given,
as the hay is generally purchased for
its uniformity, while a mixture, which
really makes the best hay,* is consid¬
ered inferior. Rut even in tho stable
some varioty is now regarded us neces¬
sary by (ho best farmers, Winter
feed is mostly loo dry. It is wonder¬
fully benefited by adding a few roots.
Timothy hay needs grain with it to
make a full, nutritive ration for
horses. It needs more grain than docs
clover hay. With llio more concern
(rated oil or cotton seed meal, good
clean straw can be largely used as
part of the rations. It supplies the
carbon or starch or heat, making ma¬
terial inoro cheaply than they can ho
got in anything else* used as food.
1ARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
Brussels sprouts aro cultivated the
same as cabbago.
lvohl raid may bo grown in drills
or transplanted liko cabbage.
In Iraiisjilaniing remember that
plants need shade on bright days un¬
til they get started.
The stem end of the potato is the
poorest for seed. It should be cul
wilh at least two eyes.
Yigorour, healthy fowls may almost
always bo detected by tho rich color
of comb—a sure indication of iiealth.
Tho comb always loses color as disease
approaches its worst stages, iu some
instances turning black.
In using meat avoid the fat por¬
tions, as they arc move detrimental
(ban benq.’icial. It is not necessary to
give meat more than three limes a
week. A pound for twenty liens is
sufficient for a meal, but for ducks it
may be doubled.
I Nursery Seashore.
A mol her, whoso children were in-
coiisolah'e when eacli autumn they
gavo up the sand of tho seashore for
a playmate, had a carpenter mako for
tho nursery a stout table with a box-
top and a sliding cover like that of a
paiut-box. The dimensions of the
table were 27 inches in height, the
length of the top 50 inches, the width
of the top 25 inches, tho depth of tho
box five inches. Tho (able was painted
brown and tho box lined with zinc.
A barrel of sand was then otdered,
and tho box was filled with it. In the
sand tho toy trees grew and flour¬
ished, ami cities wore built, dolls
were buried, gardens bloomed, and
forts wero reared. Islands and rivers
and figures were traced, and the doff,
nitions of geography made clear.
Phis box-table has found a place in
some of the hospitals for children. It
•s a happy nursery resource for chil¬
dren, when from any cause romps
and out-of-door play aro out of tho
question.—[New York Post.
Extent of English Pasture I,and.
In the House of Commons the Right
lion. Retry Chaplin, President of the
Board of Agriculture, referring to the
statement of the American emigration
commissioners who recently visited
England, that Hie 22.000,000 ncros of
productive land lying idle in Great
Britain was the chief cause of emigra¬
tion, said that the most recent statis-
ties pr veil ihc inaccuracy of the com¬
missioners’ assertion. 11 was a fact,
lie added, that in the appendix of a
report of a committee of the House of
Commons, made in 1795, it was stated
that the uncultivated land in Great
Britain amounted to 22,000,000 acres,
But whatever the case a century ago
it was ceraiti that nothing like that
amount of uncultivated land existed
now. Replying to a question Mr-
Ohapli i said lie thought it possible
, that within the last ten or fifteen years
1,000,000 acres of arable land in Great
Britain had become pasture owing to
the depression in agriculture.— [Wash¬
ington Star.
Comraon-Hen.se in Orthografy.
English spelling is the worst in the
world. Millions of dollars are wasted
each year in the writing and printing of
useless letters. The education of our
children is retarded and the'progress of
our people is hampered by our cumbrous,
scholarship illogical, misleading orthografy. The
of the world is a’most a unit
in demanding a change. The American
Filological Association has recommended
the following Rules for New Spelling,
and a resolution has been intr >duced in
Congress, instructing the Public Printer
to conform to them in ell printing for the
government.
is short. Thus spell demagog, epilog,
^ynagog, etc.
2. Drop ^ flanl e in such words as defi-
I)iu , iB nite> ftlvoritC) etc>) wl)Cre the
preceding vowel is short. Thus spell
°ppoaif, preterit, hypocrit, requisit, etc.
8 / I)ro l’ Ansi tk in words like quar
, tette, , cigarette, etc. Thus spell cigaret, (
r °* 4. ct , epauht, vedot, ga*et, etc.
Drop flanl me m words like pro-
hu9 spe I ,ro K rara ' orlf5i<ln '
tom, 5. Change telegraph, —______ PH to ph«e, , in ■____ word, etc. j. Thus like .=■__i-u-_ phan- spell j
alfabet, paragraf, filosofy, fonetic, foto-
graf, etc.
6. Substitute e for the dilthongs a; j
snd <e when they have the sound of that
letter. Thus spell pean,esthetic, diarrhea,
tubpena, esofagus, atheneum, e(c. I
If you would array yourself on the side
of progress, adopt the foregoing iu al! !
that you write.
English Army Nurses.
The best paid and the most sought for
employment in England is that of army
nurse. There are three ranks of these
nurses, and they are under the control of
(he war office. The classification is lady
superintendents, senior nursing sisters
and nursing sisters. The 1 rdy superin¬
tendents nre stationed at mi itnry hos¬
pitals. Their pay is $000 a year, in
creasing by fifty dollars a year to $1,000.
The wages of a nursing sister are $150 a
until year, increasing twenty dollars a year
$250 is reached.
A senior nursing sister has $100 addi¬
tional. They are supplied with free
quarters, for fuel, light and get allowance
clothing, board and lodging. pensions. At the
age of sixty they are retired on
No applicant is admitted under the age
of twenty-five, and without three years’
experience in hospital nursing.—London
Letter.
A Waterproof Rope.
A ropemaking firm in England is man¬
ufacturing a uew type of rope called the
anti-corrosive and eelf-lubricating wire
rope. The core and all the wires in the
strands are said to be coated with a com¬
position called glissantoline, which fills
up the interstices of the rope and makes
it impervious to corrosion. The lubri¬
cant also makes the rope more flexible.—
New York Times.
The Horse Liked Wood.
Stranger (anxiously)—“I left my horse
tied here to your post, and now he’s
gono. What became of him?”
Mr. Wayback (reflectively)—“1 dunno,
for sure; but from the way that horse o’
youru was chawin’ at my post, I
shouldn’t wonder if he’d eaten it up an’
gone off ter hunt another.—Street &
8mith’s Good News.
The New Way.
First Bank Director—“I ihink it would
be a good idea, some time or other, to
quietly employ a physician to condition inquire
into the mental and think' physical suffering |
Of our cashier. I he is
from paresis. j
Second Bank Director—“My! iny!
How much has he s'oli-n?”—New York
Weekly.
Made It All Right.
She (disappointed)—“The ring is—is
pretty, but the pearls nre so very, very
small.”
He (airily)—“Yes, I told them it was
for the smallest hand in the city.”
Measures Not Men.
Teacher—“Give a sentence which shall
include the words 'measure?, not men.’”
Bright Pupil—“A dressmaker meas-
ures not
_
Many persons household are broken down from over-
work or cares. Brown’s Iron Bit-
’a
splendid ton’c for women and children.
No man can ever rise above that at which he
alms.
.
it W /,
LVAV
9
Mr. Clarence O. Bigelow
Preset tption Druggist,
His! flth Avc., N. Y. City, says
The People's Confidence
Has been won by
HOOD’S
Sarsaparilla
In a Manner Never Equalled.
*• I am, on general principles, a versed to ex¬
pressing my views, pro or eon, in respect
to any proprietary article, but in the light
of Hood's Sarsaparilla being the product
of a brother apothecary, will say. Hood's
Sarsaparilla has secured a place in the
public confidence never attained by
any proprietary- medicine that I have
handled during an experience of more It
than twenty years in the drug trade.
Must Possess True Merit
as a remedial agent to retain its increaa-
ing popularity as a household remedy,
The sale of Hood’s Sarsaparilla exceeds
that of all similar prepara! ions combined,
of which I keep in stock some fifteen or
twenty. Its
Praises are Proclaimed
dally at my counter by those who have been
benefited by it, many of whom are r o.‘
sonal acquaintances.” Clarence
_Biok i.ow, Apothec constipation,
biliousness, Hood’s Pill's cure liver Ills,
jaundice, sick headache.
m
*
ONE ENJOYS
Both „ the method and results when
Syrup and refreshing of Figs is taken; the it is and pleasant
to taste, acta
gently Liver and yet promptly Bowels, cleanses on the Kidneys, the
dispels colds, head- sys-
tem hes effectually, and and habitual
tc levers cures
constipation, o/ita Syrup of Figs is the
only duced remedy £ the kind ever dao- pro¬
plea to ta8te an
its ceptable to the truly stomach, beneficial prompt its in
action and te
from the moat
healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular Byrup remedy of Figs known. is for sale in boo
and $1 bottles by all leading druggist drug- who
gists. Any reliable hand will
ma y no t have it on who pro-
cure j t p rom ptly for any one
wishes to try it. Do not accept anj
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. «.f*
LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK.
CHILD BIRTH • • •
a • , • MADE EASY!
“ Mothers’ Frieno ” is a scientific¬
ally prepared Liniment, every ingre¬
dient of recognized value and in
constant use by the medical pro¬
fession. These ingredients are com¬
bined in a manner hitherto unknown
"MOTHERS’
• FRIEND" •
WILL DO all that is claimed for
it AND MORE. It Shortens Labor,
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to
Life of Mother and Child. Book
to “ Mothers ” mailed FREE, con¬
taining valuable information and
voluntary testimonials.
Sent by express on receipt of price -11.50 per bottle
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta. Ga.
BOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
The old saying that “ con¬
sumption can be cured if
taken in time ” was poor com¬
fort. It seemed to invite a
trial, but to anticipate failure.
The other one, not so old,
“consumption can be cured,”
is considered by many false.
Both are true and not
true; the first is prudent—-
one cannot begin too early.
The means is careful liv-
in £- Scott’s Emulsion of
cod-liver . oJi is sometimes an
important part of that.
Let us send you a book on
careful living —free.
Scott & Bownk, Chemists, 132 South 5th Avenue,
N 'y^dr k ug e , S .k* e p S S«o«f. Emulsion of cod-liver
©ii—all druggists everywhere do. $ 1 .
33
Kennedy’s
MedicalDiscovery
Takes hold in this order:
Bowels,
Liver,
Kld-lieVS “o]
_ . , .
lHSlu.e DKlIi,
Outside Skin,
Driving everything before it that ought to ) e out
You know whether
x^OU n©e(3 it OP nOt 0
Sold by every druggist, and manufaotund by
DONALD KENNEDY,
ROXBURY, MASS.
AN ASTONISHING
TONIC FOR WOMEN.
McELHEE’S
OF
CARDUI
It Strengthens the Weak, Quiets the
Nerves, Relieves Cures Monthly
Suffering and
FEMALE DISEASES.
ASK YOUR DRUGGIST ABOUT IT.
*1.00 PER BOTTLE.
CHATTANOOGA MED. CO., Chattanooga, Tenn.
i
e
i MLt B cl D |nanic?i, ttWsS and Paints Mint. which stain
1 “t l! o ll Is t n !g and u n the pays lor no Odor- tin
less. Durable, consumer purchase.
or giass package with every
A Sample Cake of Soap and its
hw page ami Book Beauty; on Dermatology Illustrated;
JCDBURYs fc2y§Sv on and Skin, Blood Scalp. diseases Nervous sent
ialSqap 3 31*1 sealed for IOc.: also
i lo wgaHBirth Disfigurements, Marks, Moles, like
India Ink and
~MB tPcyvder Marks, Scars, Pit.
TO 'ri JjsRF tlngs,Rednes8 of Nose,Su-
perfluous Hair, Pimples.
John H. Woodbury,
tjS’no Dermatologist, 125 W.
' erft Consultation 4!2d St., New free,at YorkCltj’. offim
It 3 ” or by letter.
_ ENSIGNS—Due nil SOLDIERS! !< dis-
i H a’lea. 5*2 Eke for increase. 26 years expert nence.
r Write ron Laws. A. D. W. C. JlcCOftfflCl A Cincinnati K O. tV
SUNS, Washington. t.
QUAINT AND CURIOUS.
There are more than 8000 species of
fishes.
The cuttle fish exudes a dark pig-
roent to blind its pursuer.
In Eastern Asia, a fish is found with
eyes In halves, liko some eye-glasses,
for near and far sight.
Japan has a base ball nine com¬
posed of Michigan, Harvard, Yale,
Princeton and Columbia men.
'•The Ncverworks” is a title given
to a vague sort of alliance among
Washington’s young men about town.
Now York custom officers detected
a Chicago jeweler trying to smuggle
a lot of diamonds under a court plas-
ter on his back.
The plateaus of Tibet are said to bo
little better than vast solitudes, for,
although there is an abundance of sueh
animals as yaks, horses and sheep, tho
population is very sparse.
The name of the Postmaster-General
of Siam is Loiudetch Plira Clion Nong
Ya Thor Shah Fa Bahaumangsi Swan-
guvusga Kooma Arapli Bhaunbhad-
daroongaseo Vavadey.
An elephant’s tooth was recently
filled at the Paris Jardin des Plantes,
in Paris, France. The animal en¬
dured the ordeal of filling and boring
with great patience, and at the con¬
clusion of the operation caressed the
operator.
The kauri pine is undisputed sover¬
eign of the Australian forest. No
other tree can approach it in grandeur
of proportion or in impressiveness,
when, as one of a clan, it holds as its
own stretches of country hundreds of
miles in extent.
The oldest piece of cloth in any
American collection is that possessed
by tho Brooklyn, N. Y., Institute.
It is a piece of coarse Egytian linon,
not unlike the momie cloth of the
present day, and is supposed to be
some 6000 years old.
Snuff has been made from a very
early period, fit st and most largely by
the Spanish, who prepared it with
care and scented it with various ma¬
terials. Next the Low Countries,
Scotland and England extended and
popularized the use of snuff
Gertrude Souine, a pretty girl of
eighteen years who lives in a town in
Aroostook county, Me., has never
been known to laugh or even to smile.
While intelligent in other matters, sho
apparently cannot understand a joke
and is unmoved by the keenest witti¬
cisms.
Hiram Andrews has presented to
the Essex Institute of Salem, Mass., a
wooden tureen made from fifty differ¬
ent kinds of wood. There is in the
centre a mosaic star of locust wood,
taken, it is said, from the stump of
the tree on which the witches were
banged in Salem.
Fifty cities of the United States
have a total population of 10,095,370,
and twenty-two of these have a popu¬
lation of over 100,000 each. In cities
of the first magnitude the cost of con¬
struction and repairs per head is $1.50 (
while in cities of less than 100,000 the
cost is $2.04 per capita.
The old ‘‘Parliamentary Oak,” in
Clipstone Park, England, is believed
to be 1500 years old. Tho tallest oak
in that country, called the “Duke’s
Walking Stick,” is higher than the
spire of Westminster Abbey, and the
largest is tho “Cowthorpie,” which
now measures seventy-eight feet in
circumference, and, at one time, with
its branches, covered more than au
acre of space.
Big Waves Without Wind.
One of the most dreaded perils of
the sea is the great wave that occasion¬
ally appears, a hurrying mountain of
water sweeping across the calm sur.
face of the ocean even in the finest
weather. Fortunately these phenome¬
na are very rare, but several times
they have been encountered by ships.
Only a short lime ago the Etruria was
met by a wave of this kind, which
rolled upon her like a wall ot water
and, breaking against her sides, swept
the deck with irresistible force, killing
one sailor and seriously injuring oth-
ers. A smaller and less stanch vessel
might have been overwhelmed and
sent to the bottom by the blow. The
cause of theso singular waves is be.
lieved to be some disturbance of a vol¬
canic nature at the bottom of ihe sea.
Volcanoes exist in the ocean as well
as on land; in fact, nearly all tho
volcanoes known are on or near the
seacoast. It is easy to see that an up¬
heaval at the sea bottom may start a
biilow at the surface of the water
when we remember that huge waves
have been sent clear across the Pacific
Ocean to San Francisco by volcanic
shakings of the earth on t-lie borders
of Asia.— [Picayune.
His Chances.
“If I had half a chance I’d marry,”
remarked a handsome millionaire
bachelor to a good lookiug girl.
“But you never will have,” she as¬
serted.
“Why not?” he asked, somewhat
taken aback.
“Because,” and she smiled in a way
that fascinated him, “every chance in
your ease is a whole one.”
It was the merest chance she took
but it netted her a million and a m ui.
— [Detroit Free Press.
Virginia’s Historic Ground.
The largest price paid the owner of
the farm on which the famous “bioody
angle” how in rpottsylvania is situated recalls
soil has important a proportion of Virginia
an extensive value on account of
its association with historic events. With
the possible exception of Greece and
England—we doub t even whether an
exception ought to bo made in the in¬
stance of these countries—there
is no land in the world which contains
more localities which derive their inter¬
est from the records of history, and which,
if put up for sale, would bring a larger
sum for reasons which have no relation
whatever to the question of natural pro¬
ductiveness or general convenience.
change Fortunately, though these scenes may
hands, they cannot, like Libby
prison, be removed beyond the borders-
of the old state. Jamestown, Yorktown,
Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Manas
bbs, the Wilderness, they are hete to
stay and to call up in the minds of the
remotest generations of Virginians the
heroic deeds of their anctstors, which
are a part of the character of the living.
—Richmond Times.
South Carolina’s Exhibit.
Although refused the South sitting Carolina legisla¬
ture at its last to appro
priate exhibit any money whatever for a state
of the at Chicago, have the patriotic women in
-state taken the matter
charge and are making splendid efforts
to have South Carolina well represented
at the World’s fair. The women al over
the state are dilligently co-operating and
pushing exhibits. ahead Among iu the the matter notable of collect¬ articles
ing
secured so far is a broadcloth coat made
by ex President Andrew Jackson for
Chief Justice Simpson in 1820, when
Jackson was a tailor at Laurens; also a
quilt made by a lady to whom Jackson
ident was engaged in 1820. The worthy pres¬
of the Woman’s World’s Fair As¬
sociation deserves lasting gratitude at the
hands of South Carolina for her untiring
efforts to make the state exhibit a success.
Parallel Cases.
Mrs. Grumps—“There are thousands
of occupations in which men have places
which women should fill. Why shouldn’t
women be druggists? Answer me that.”
Mr. Grumps—“This cottage pudding
isn’t good at all. How did you make
it?”
Mrs. Grumps—“I took a few handfuls
of flour and some milk and a few eggs, I
forget how many, and some sugar, I
think, and I believe I added some salt
and maybe fome baking powder, don’t
know how much. I never measure."
Mr. Grumps—“That’s why.”—New
York Weekly.
How’s This f
We offer One Hundred Dollars reward ft»
any taking case ot catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall’s Catarrh Cur 3 .
F.J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, O.
_vve, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney perfectly for the last 15 years, business and believe him
tions, honorable in all transac¬
and financially able to carry out any ob¬
ligations \V made bv their firm.
est & Tbu ax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Wadding, Druggists, Kinnan Toledo, & Marvin, Wholesale
_ Hall’s O.
Catarrh Cure is tak en Internally, act¬
ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur¬
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free.
Price 75c. per bottle. Sold by all druggists.
The Only One Ever Printed.
CAN YOU FIND THE WORD?
There Is a 3 inch display adveriisement in
this paper, this week, which has no two words
alike 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, will send them the name of the
word and they return you book, beauti¬
ful LITHOGRAPHS Or SAMPLES FREE.
If you cannot bring your condition to your
mind, bring your mind to your condition.
ladies building neeoing a tonle, or children Iron wno
a ant up, should take Brown’s
Biltors. Jt is pleasant to take, cures Malaria,
Indigestion, hunts,makes Biiio isness rich and Liver Com-
l the Blood and Dura.
Our moods are lenses; ooloring the world
with its many different hues.
I. R. Branham, editor Christian Index, At¬
lanta, with unfailing, Ga., writes -. “ I have used Bradycrotine
ache.” druggists, prompt, decided relief for head¬
All fifty cents.
B. F. Allen & Co., 865 Canal stree% New
York, are sole - gents in the United States for
Beecham’s Pids. 25centsabox.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Eye-wafer.Druggists soil at 25- per bottle.
Catarrh-Remove the Cause.
I was afflicted from infancy with Catarrh, and for ten years with eruptions on my face.
I w-as attended by the best physicians, and used a number of Blood remedies with no per¬
manent relief. MY LIFE BECAME A BURDEN TO ME, for my case was declared incurable,
I saw S. S. S. advertised, and took eight bottles, which cured me entirely, and I feel like
a new person.—Miss Josie Owen, Montpelier, Ohio.
I was the victim of the worst case of Catarrh that I ever heard of. I was entirely
deaf in one ear, and all the inside of my nose, including part of the bone, sloughed off.
No sort of treatment benefited me, and physicians said “I would never be any better.” As
a last resort I took Swift’s Specific, and it entirely cured me and restored my hearing. I
have been well for years, with no sign of return of the disease.—Mrs. Josephine Polhill,
Due West, S. C. S. S. S. cures Catarrh, like it does other Blood diseases, by elimina¬
ting the poison which causes it. Treatise on Blood and Skin mailed free.
SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, Atlanta, Ga.
“German
I Syrup” farmer Edom, Texas. I
am a at
have used German Syrup for six
years successfully for Sore Throat,
Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Pains in
Chest and Lungs and Spitting-up of
Blood. I have tried many kinds of
Cough Syrups in my time, but let
me say to anyone wanting such a
medicine—German Syrup is the best.
We are subject to so many sudden
changes from cold to hot, damp
weather here, but in families where
German Syrup is used there is little
trouble from colds. John F. Jones. @
•Tull’s Tiny Pills*
^3 ^ A ninglo dose produces beneficial and re- n
suit*, gri vf ng; cheerfulness of mind
A Buoyancy of body to which you were
wW before a unparalleled. stranger. They enjoy 25cts. a pop- ^
ularity Price,
THECOSTISTHESAME,
; a,j jw I ft M IWcod piCKETJ. titi
HI
i m-
'M nr m
■^TERsoiSffia^i AFTER 2*YEAR
The Hartman Steel Picket Fence
Costsno more than an ordinary clumsy wood picket affair that obstructs tha vtew nnd wM.roFor.Ml *
them i T£BZ
MONIACS SALES
U
II
V* (
<
V i *
>v\
try l>gu. CO\ IP V
I
COPYRIGHT 1691
is Sick this: when Bilious you’re Headaches, Bufferin'! Const? f, r] !
or
pation, Indigestion, derangement Bilious Attacks
or any of the Liver
Stomach, or Bowels, get somethin* 8
that relieves promptly and cures
permanently. Don’t shock th e syj-
tern with the ordinary pills— get
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets.
(but They’re that’s the smallest, for one thin*
easiest take. a great thing), and the
to
They’re the best, for they work
in Nature’s own way — mildly and
gently, but thoroughly and ‘effec¬
tively. They’re cheapest,
the for they’re
guaranteed to give satisfaction" or
your money is returned. You pay
only for the good you get
What more can you ask?
But don’t get something that the
dealer says is “just as good.” It
may be better for him, but it’s
pretty certain to be worse for you,
m 5
V little
« f LIVER
! PILLS
I-
DO NOT GRIPE NOR SICKEN,
Sure ACHi£, cure for SICK HEAD-
Impaired glands. digestion, const!-
UJ pation, vital organs, torpid Theyarcuse diz¬
remove nausea,
%o ziness. Magical effect on Kid¬
neys and bladder. Conquer dig-
ioo . bilions nervous
orders. Establish nat-
utal Daily Action.
blood. Beautify Purely complexion Vegetable. by purifying
The dose is nicely adjusted to suit case, as one pill can
never betoo much. Each vial contains 42, carried in vest
pocket., like lead pencil. Business man’s great
convenience. Taken easier than sugar. Sold every¬
where. All genuine goods bear “Crescent"
Send 2-cent stamp. You get 82 page book with sample.
DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO., St. Louis. Mo.
Dr. S.C. Parsons,
Blood Purifier.
Cures Svphilis, Itcb, Hu¬
mors, Blieijniatism.Pimplei, Swellings, Skin Dis¬
eases, Malaria, Ca'arrli,
Scrofula,
Fevers, Liver and Kidney
Diseases, Old Sores, Erupt¬ result¬
ions and all disorders
ing from impure blood.
Frloe $1.00.
SOLD BV DRUGGISTS.
N Dr. 8. C. Parsons, “Family
Physician'’ tolls how to get well and iteep well;
400 pages, profusely illustrated- itvi'M or pan;'-
phlets,question lists,or private information free
of charge, address with stamp,
l»R. S. C. PARSONS, Savannah, Ga.
* •••••••••••«...................... regulate?
* the RIPANS stomach, TABULES liver and bowels, 2
.
s Ek purify the blood, are safe and ef-®
| fectual. The best general family®
« i medicine known for Biliousness.®
Breatb, Constipation, Headache, Dyspepsia, Heartburn, Foul® Loss®
Painful of Appetite, Mental Depression,®
4 Digestion, Pimples, Sallow#
Complexion, Tired Feeling, and#
•every •blood, symptom or disease the resulting liver from intestines? impure•
to perform orafailure their by functions. stomach, Persons or given to ?
a X over-eating benefited proper by taking T A B U LE after
are a ®
® l each meal. Price, by mail, 1 gross *2; 1 bottle 15c. Ad- ®
dress Agents THE Wanted; RIPANS CHEMICAL EIGHTY CO.,10SpruceSt.,N.Y.® profit.
® per cent ®
ED BUGS —Will you drive
out the BED
BUGS or will
. the Bed Bugs
drive out you ? This query increases In In-
tensity as the warm weather advances.
BUTCHER’S powerful DEAD SHOT
is a killer. It curia them up w
fire does a leaf; is a sure preventive of return, and
is a promoter of “ Sleep in Pence.” Price *25
Cents, at.stores or by mail.
FltED’K BUTCHER * SONS,
St. Albans. Vt.
GOLD MEDAL, PARIS.
wTbaker & CO.’S
H Breakfast Cocoa
from which the excces of oil
has been removed,
Is absolutely pure and
it is soluble »
No Chemicals
are used in its prepara ion. It
IS has more than three times the
strength of Cocoa mixed with
Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar,
and Is therefore far more eco¬
nomical, costing less than one
cent a cup. It is delicious, nour-
^ ishing, strengthening, easily
digested, and admirably adapted for invalids
as well as for per sona in health.
Sold by Grocers e verywhere.
W. BAKEB & CO., Dorchester, Mass.
I A
„ PISO’S CURE.;FOR
H I Con ■■■rapt! vc. and people H H
who have weak lunge or Aeth-
■ ■ mi, should U80 Pleo'e Cure for ES gj
consumption. It has cored
CM thousand., it has not Injur- H
Heil H one. It is cough not bad to take. ■
it is the best syrup.
Sold everywhere. *5c.
fBBrntffiii’T’llf**1 k H M I? lu ff
A. N. U..... ......Nineteen'92.