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FOIt THE FARM A!TD HUME.
Honci *n«l Hhdli fbr Fowls.
The Poultry World says: “Bone
meal and crushed shells may be used
generously In feeding fowls. That is,
if the crushed oyster shells and granu¬
lated bones are mixed and placed in a
box inside the hen-house, where the
birds can have access to these articles
freely, they will eat of them no more
than they need. If these are mixed
with the food given, either with the
dry grains or in the soft mash, much
of lioth is wasted, to say nothing of
the additional trouble caused in pre-
paring it thus. Fowls devour no
more of the oyster shell particles than
they naturally require to assist diges-
tiou and to help in forming the shells
of eggs. Of pounded bones they will
eat more; but if both are left where
they always . get ....... them handy, they
can °
wul not eat too much of either for -
their good.”
Warm Shelter for Itwk.
Of the various ways through which
it is possible for the average dairyman
to enhance his profit, the most ef¬
fectual is first to reduce the cost of
producing his milk. * This he can do
in a variety of ways. One way of
doing so lies in the improvment of bis
milking stock. This is a certain but
slow way, and must be the work of a
few years. And then another way,
more rapid; and that can at once be 1
available, consists in reducing the cost
of keeping bis cows.
This, again, he may do in different
ways; first, by securing greater
warmth and more comfort for hjs
cows in winter. The heaviest item of
expense which he incurs consists in
wintering his cows, and the more they
are exposed to the cold, the heavier j
that item becomes. Cows eat more in
winter than at any other time, simply
because more heat is absorbed from j
their bodies by the cold air. For in-
stance, we all know that hot water
will cool faster on a cold day than on
a warm one. Therelore the animal
heat must be kept up to an uniform
standard, and the extra loss of
warmth must he restored by more
fuel, in form of feed, and this in-
creases the cost of keeping and the
cost of producing the fall and winter
supply of milk. Keep the cows warm,
and they will eat no more in the win¬
ter than at any other time, and they
will require less extra food for winter,
just in proportion as they are made
warm and comfortable, and by just so
much they will turn out milk at a re-
duced expense. There is profit in
keeping cows warm in winter. It
costs much less to tone down the cold
of our severe climate by providing
warm, comfortable buildings for cows.
If the owner has not secured them al
ready, the sooner he gets them the
better, and not be furnishing extra
food year alter year, to restore the
heat needlessly lost by the exposure of
his cows to the cold air .—National
Stockman.
Kicking; Cowi-Cure Them
Cows will kick— some of them; and
heifers with their first calves, are ex¬
pert at it. An unhandled, “ungentled”
cow, takes as naturally to kicking, as
Leghorn hens do to scratching. The
calf should be placed on the cow’s lelt
side, and encouraged to suck, but
whether it does or not, let the milker
at once begin to milk. Saving the
milk is of no importance, so, if the
heifer is nervous, keep the pail away,
and milk on the ground. If she kicks
soothe her, and begin again. Do not
let her think her kicking has any ef¬
fect. A rail may be placed so that
kicking may be a disagreeable perfor¬
mance, and sometimes a cow may be
placed close to a rail fence, which de¬
fends the milker from the blows of a
really vicious kicker, and the milking
still go on. The cow will ordinarily
yield to circumstances, and stand still
after a while; at least, the pressure of
the milk in the udder, which may
cause inflammation, can thus be re¬
lieved. If the cow continues nervous,
and w ill not be pacified, the thing to
do is, to tie or strap her legs. This
may be doDe with a light rope like a
bed-cord. It is passed once around
the left leg below the hock, tied by a
“half-hitch” (half a knot), then twist¬
ed a few times, and another hitch
turned in it, and finally passed around
the right leg, and tied in a bow-knot,
so that it can he quickly untied. A
cow so tied cannot kick, but she is al¬
most sure to take short steps back¬
ward, and when she gets to the eDd
of her tie-st rap, or hack as far as she
can go in the stanchions, her hind legs
may be strained far hack, and a3 her
positian is a very unsteady one, she
may fall down. To prevent this, a
rape may be passed twice around the
tie-rope, carried forward, and fastened
to the manager.. This will prevent
the backing, and the cow will proba¬
bly soon give up, and stand quietly.—
American Agriculturist.
Carin And (larden J\olr«.
no useless stock to eat up the
profits.
The average weight of milk is 8 5-8
ibs. per gallon.
Clover grass is the cheapoo* feed
STP” avune.
Don’t forget to use the roller on the
cloddy wheat fields.
Zo fceeptog' a hoiiic —cnorij IS a8
much in the driver as in the ieed.
Medium-sized sheep usually have
the best and heaviest fleeces.
Farmers should pay more attention
to the feet of tholr horses than is their
usual custom.
Moderate loads and more trips is
much better than taking the risk of
spoiling the horses or ruining their
oonotitutions.
Many farmers make a mistake ic
attempting to carry more stock over
the winter than they have feed to keep
well.
Many a dairyman might reduce the
number of his cows one-half and make
ynore clear profit than from the larger
number.
The careful shepherd will watch hi*
eg ^ dean up M bur9>
g , sh needl08t et( , > whlch wiU ,
5n and , nJure the fleecft
The dev-Lopmeut . t of a good walking ,
speed * in the horse is of more impor-
tance to . the farmer than thedevelop- _ . ,
ment of ... trotting capacity.
The horses should have water quite
often when at heavy work, and es¬
pecially while ploughing and harrow¬
ing the wheat land in the dry Fall
season.
The Tacoma (Puget Sound) Even-
iny New is jubilant over stalks of
what is designated as “seven beaded
wheat,” with stalks six feet high from
root to top; also “red-top” clover six
feet in the 'sngth. The yield of wheat
was eighty-five bushels per acre,
Gather all the trash from the gar
den and add it to the trash-pile; give
the garden a heavy dressing of well-
rotted manure and p i„ w it carefully
under in readiness for next spring,
especially if it be strong loam or clay,
leaving the surface rough. A moder¬
ate dressing of compost, lightly
plowed under-in the spring, will then
fit the garden admirably for a big
crop next summer.
Western farmers have learned to
keep their hogs in yards until the dew
t s ^e grass. The theory is that
^^e germs of hog cholera are collected
in the dew and are very likely to be
taken by the hog while grazing early
the morning. It is quite possible
that the care which this treatment im-
P lies is it9elf a safeguard against chol-
e ra. Most AVestern hogs receive un¬
limited corn and but little care of any
kind.
The idea that straw is only of value
to rot down into manure has had its
day. It has very little value for this
purpose, and if no better use can be
had for it there would he good policy
in selling straw wherever there was a
near market. But bright wheat or
oat straw makes a valuable part of the
ration for horses or store stock, it
needs to be fed with grain, but with
either corn or oats cut straw makes in
most places a better and cheaper feed
than hay alone.
As soon as corn is husked it may be
exposed to a temperature of 110 de¬
grees without injury; but if the heat
is raised much more than this the germ
will be liable to in jury. At least this
is the experience of some who heated
sweet corn in fruit evaporators to dry
it more rapidly. Sweet corn is very
difficult to secure in good condition,
and very likely field eorn might be
dried at a higher temperature without
damage.
Household Hints,
Straw matting may be cleaned with
a large coarse cloth dipped in salt and
water, and then wiped dry.
The long swinging glasses are com¬
ing into favor, and bureaus, dressing-
tables and walls are amply supplied
with mirrors.
Cayenne pepper blown into the
cracks wiiere ants congregate will
drive them away. The same remedy
is also good for mice.
If matting, counterpanes, or bed¬
spreads have oil spots on them, wet
with alcohol, rub with hard soap, and
then rinse with dear, cold water.
Stair carpets should always have
three or four thicknesses of paper put
under them, at or over the edge of
every stair, which is the part where
they first wear out.
Recipes.
Omelet Soujffk .—Add to the yolks of
six eggs a tablespoonful of flour, pep¬
per and salt; stir well together; add
the whites of the eggs and fry in a
saucepan in which has been melted
three ounces of butter.
Codfish Minced .—Flake up cold
boiled cod and to three cups of fish
add one large mashed potato, a small
piece of butter, one-half teaspoonful
of corn starch, one beaten egg; make
int*> small cakes and fry in butter.
Bread Pudding .—Soak the soft part
of a baker’s loaf in a pint of warm
milk; add a tablespoonful of soft
butter, a tablesj oonful of thick cream,
the rind and a part of the juice of a
lemon and two wod-beaten eggs.
Flour a large cupful of dried cur-
rants, grate nutmeg over them and
add to the rest. Bake in weil-but-
tered custard cups and serve with
pudding sauce, either hard or liquid.
Hominy Muffins.—A teacupful of
boiling water poured upon two table¬
spoonfuls of uncooked hominy. Sim¬
mer fifteen minutes; add a cup and
a half of boiling milk and ‘.
xuuiim oi cornmeat. When cool
add two well beaten eggs, two table-
snonnfnls »uirar salt, and a te»
spoonful of baking powder. Pour
into the muffin-pans, which have been
previously heated and buttered, and
bake fifteen minutes.
TOPICS OF THE DAT.
The last formulated idea in crazes is
an international cooking-match. This
is to take place in the aquarium in
Westminster, London. It means ttie
production of the favorite dishes of
each nation. The Briton will present
his plum pudding and roast beef, the
Spaniard ola-pod-rida. the Italian mno
aroni a la garlic, the German his brat-
wurst and sauerkraut, the ltusaiau his
kupoosta aoup, the Frenchman his fri¬
cassee, and the Norwegian will teach
bow to cook eggs in that variety of
ways which astonishes the traveler in
his clime. ,
An ingenious Frenchman has con¬
ceived the thoroughly Parisian idea of
preserving bodies by covering them
with a metal skin. Burying, be says,
has been condemned by experience;
cremation is bad, as it destroys ail evi¬
dence of crime in case murder has
been committed, and embalming is ex¬
pensive. But galvanizing is safe and
cheap. The poor can be zinc-plated,
weil-to doindividuals may acquire a
copper coat and the miiionaire can en¬
joy the luxury of silver or gold plate,
M. Kergovaty, the inventor r>Y this
method, says he bas already used it
successfully eleven times in the case
of human beings, and over 100 times
for animals.
To deter boys from climing the tel¬
ephone poles at Fond du Lac, Wis.,
the plan of attaching wire to the
spikes and connecting them with a
battery was conceived, and it worked
to perfection.The first day no less than
200 boys attempted to climb the poles,
but immediately received such a shock
that they retreated in dismay. Later,
however, a farmer drove up to the
hole and hitched his horses. One of
the animab unsuspectingly caught
hold of the spike, and immediately
there was a start and a jump, and the
hitching strap snapped and away went
the team. The farmer suffered the
fracture of three ribs in attempting to
stop the runaways, one or more
women were run over and the wagon
smashed to atoms.
An American expedition sent out
last year by a wealthy New York lady
to find the site of the Garden of Eden
reports important Geographical discov¬
eries in the region of Chaldea, south
of Babylon. The best encouragement,
however, was in locating definitely the
original city of Sippora, on the hank
of the Euphrates. It was here that,
according to ancient Chaldean history,
Noah was commanded to bury all the
records of the anteduluvian world be¬
fore he embarked in the ark, in order;
that they might be preserved. “ We
mean to dig up this ground thorough¬
ly,” says the leader of the expediton,
“and maybe shall find something as¬
tonishing.”
A Hire Surgical Operation.
A recent issue of the Washington
Poet says; A very rare surgical oper¬
ation was performed with great suc¬
cess last I hursday by Dr. D. W. Bliss,
in conjunction with Dr. Hammett,
upon George It. Fowler, the 21-year
old son of Mr. R C. Fowler, Acting
First Assistant Fostraaster-GeneraL
The young gentleman was affected
with a troublesome cough during the
summer and two weeks ago he began
to be confined to his bed with a serious
and oppressive illness which was vari¬
ously believed to be inflammation ( r
congestion of the lungs or consump¬
tion. Gradually the chest became dis¬
tended and the lung space filled up, so
that the young man was on the point
of suffocation, when, on Tuesday, Dr.
Hammett, applying his ear to the pa¬
tient’s chest, thought he detected
something like a breathing through
water. Dr. Bliss was called into con-
su tation and it was agreed that there
was an accumulation of water in the
chest.
This was not a physical certainty,
because the water could not he felt
from the outside, hut it was the diag¬
nosis of the two doctors in joint con¬
sultation. Hydrothorax they call the
disease, meaning “water in the chest.”
For this a difficult and dangerous sur-
g cal operation was necessary, without
which the patient could not live. The
operation was performed with a kind
of pump known as Delford’s a'pirator.
A large needle was inserted in one of
the rib spaces under the left arm and
an entrance was made clear into the
left lung. A srnad tube attached to
the aspirator was put into this open¬
ing and the pump was set to work. In
a short time fifty-two ounces, or about
three and a lmlf pints, of water were
drawn off, and the patient experienced
immediate relief and could breathe
freely. The accumulated water had
crushed the heart fmm its usual seat
,, the left over t0 the patient’s right
^ and had pushed tiie left luDg up
und „ hi8 ch}n
Tlie operation, which is the resu t of
recent discovery and was not known to
surgical science a d >zen years ago, was
a decided success; hut t e chief merit
claimed by the phys cians is the accu¬
racy of the diagnosis, which was
outcome of a great deal of
the surgeons were able to
the patient o t of danger. Two
bofore bo was thought to be
recovery. The operation is
as one of the most successful
of special surgical treatment in
cult oases ever known in
CHILDREN’S COLUMN.
Fuss,’* Treasure,
/here once was a time, little maiden,
When my hoart was so full of pride,
\ fond old cat in the sun I set
With six little kits at uiy side.
Miou ! Miou ! little maiden,
Miou ! for the cold, oold sea I
Miry heeded me not but they drowned tho lot
And oniy left one for me.
But a time will come, little maidon,
When the rats have eaten the oorn,
And many a mouse in my master’s house
Is squeaking from night to morn.
When the bacon is rapidly shrinking,
And the cheese will not last for a day,
l'hcn he’ll think of me and tho oold, cold sea,
And my little ones gone away.
— ftrdK. H'etherby.
“Told a Lie With Ills t'lnger.’*
A little boy, for a trick, pointed his
finger to the wrong road when a man
Asked him which way the doctor went.
As a result the man missed the doctor
and his little boy died because the
doctor came too late to take a fishbone
from his throat At the fun«ral the
minister said the little boy was killed
by a lie which another boy told with
his finger.
I suppose that boy did not know the
mischief he did. Ot course nobody
thinks he meant to kiii a little boy
when he pointed the wrong way. He
only wanted to have a llltlofun. But
it was fun that cost somebody a great
deal; if he ever heard tho result of it,
he must have felt guilty of doing
mean and wicked thing, We ought
never trifle with tho truth .—Chil
dren’s Friend.
A Superstitious Cockatoo,
"Our Joe” is tt fine specimen of the
species known as the sulphur-crested
cockatoo.
He always showed a great dread of
dolls or manikins, and this led us to
tease him by placing our pet Punchin¬
ello at the foot of his perch. Fear of
tlie uncanny thing kept him a close
prisoner folr some time; but one day
ho came cautiously down the upright
pole, and backed judiciously away
from the rear of the hated monstros-
lty. Phis provoked . ti new device; ,
another grinning Uguro was placed
back of tho stand. After long con¬
templation of the situation “Joe” now
managed to escape, with much trepi¬
dation—from one side; but gradually
the entire collection of manikins
was placed around his perch, so that
they laid siege to him. At this “Joe”
became greatly incensed. His crest
rose and fell every minute in the day.
(It is a curious fact that it never
seemed to occur to him that he might
fly from the perch. He has never at¬
tempted to reach it or leave It in that
way, but invariably climbs up or
down by means of his feet and beak.)
And now “Joe’s” life began to have
a shade of anxiety in it, until at last
he became quite unhappy. One mem¬
orable day, stealthily descending from
aloft, he dashed suddenly into the
charmed circle, and siezed Mrs. Punch
by her wonderful frilled cap. Then,
with crest erect and eyes flashing,—
his form trembling with rage and ex¬
citement,—he rushed up the pole, and,
once more safely aloft, he tore the
offending Judy into pieces, with an
energy bordering on insanity. This
tremendous effort sufficed for tho re¬
mainder of tho day, during which he
sat upon his perch with his feathers
ruffled and trembling.
So, one by one, the members of that
unfortunato family fell victims to his
hatred. For a long time, he did not
care to attack Punch himself; but he
finally mustered courage sufficient to
attempt the capture of his arch-enemy,
and, a few minutes later, the terri¬
ble toy, stripped of his gilt and tinsel¬
ed bravery, lay hopelessly broken and
disfigured, upon the floor.— St. Nich¬
olas.
London’s Public Drinking Houses.
In a given district in th ) north of
London (St Pancras) 52 public houses
vere watched one Saturday night,
with the result that 11,408 men, 7,781
women, and 1,958 children, or a total
of 21,092 persons, were "Been to enter
between 9 nnd 12 o’clock. In anoth¬
er district, in the south, tho total num
her of persons going to the 50 public
houses watched was 29,857, made up
of 17,347 men, 10,665 women, nnd 1,-
645 children. In the west 49 houser
were visited by 21,962 persons, of
whom 12.809 wore men, 7,455 womer
and 1,698 children. In the east, rep
resented by 49 houses, there were 7.-
246 male visitors, 4,933 female, and 1,-
718 children, makingla to a’ of 13,897.
Tho total for the 200 public houses
watched for the satno three, hours v ;u
86,608 visitors. Following up t Is
inquiry they had made a small ono a*
to the number of women visiting pub¬
lic houses in thr- morning between t : 'f
hours of 10 and 12, and onu Monday
12 houses were watched near Tolnur
square, with fhe result of finding that
as many as 1,250 women went to
them between those hours.-- MacMil¬
lan.
Industry. —The agricultural dencribedas college mod¬ at
Btsrkeville, Miss., is a
el institution. In addition to acientifio
study, the couroe includes a considerable
amount of manual labor, for which the
B tudSP.t 8 JH-& ill!! 1 oti 'ibeir UoartTaccoun t,
A dose of Bed Star Cough Cure will
ami prevent you disturbing in right frame the congregation,
put you a of mind to
enjoy the service*. Twenty-five cents
a bottle.
First Coffee. —The first coffee ever
produced by Mrs. Aizerotb, in the United States Manatee, wasgrown Fla.,
near '
in 1880. She has twenty-five coffee trees
oa her plantation. —Exchange,
Why Jews Live as F .on«.
Th* ttexo England Medical Monthly com¬
and ments healthful very favorably livea of on the ths Jews. proverbial Ion*
Dr. Picard
holds that this superiority is due to their
stringent health lawa. The Mosaic, like th*
older Carding Egyptian code, is very stringent re-
the eating of flesh and other articles
of food. Of tlie animals examined a large
proportion are always condemned as unfit for
food. People who eat meat indiscriminately
are very prone to dieorders of the h ood and
of th* wbioh kidneys, for meal is oompoaed of nitro¬
gen, ths kidneys havt to remove from
the blood, and of course they cannot do this
successfully except by the aid of Warner's
safe cure, th* bust kidney sti engthener, un¬
less it is temperately partaken o! and only
the very best meat used. Jews also use al¬
coholic liquors very sparingly and thus keep
up good digestion,and then again they are a
holiday-loving —Houttheeptr. and Kabbath-obeerving clan
Uses to nhielt Paper may be Put.
Paper, being nearly air-tight, will ex¬
clude cold, and should be uaed more than
It now is. Builders place paper between
the boards aud clapboards follow of a he use,
and we should do well to their ex¬
ample in smaller matters. Farmers have
found that the extra warmth secured by
lacking severs! thicknesfes of newspa-
pers around the inside of hen houses, etc.,
have saved extra food. A layer of paper
nuder a is carpet is preferable used, to the straw,
which sometimes aud if pa¬
per made for this purpose can not be ob¬
tained, do nearly several well. layers of newspaper will
bed coverings as will Papers take spread between of
the place extra
blankets. A folded paper is un excellent
lung protector; around one the shoulders, over the chest, under and the
another
outside garment, would often save a cold
and, flour perhaps, pneumonia. make Dissolved useful in
paste, newspapers elsewhere, &
filling for cracks in floors and scattered
betaps of paper, wet and over
the floor when sweeping, will Bave the
dust in the room as well as brighten the
carpet. Bits of paper with soapsuds are
effectual in cleaning bottles, and are eas¬
ily lemoved with the water Greasy
dishes aud kettles, if first rubbed with
paper, wash much easier; the paper ab¬
sorbs the grease, and is all the better for
kindling the fire. A grease spot can often
be taken out of a carpet or garment by
placing two or three layer* ( f paper over
it, then put a warm iron on the pa| er
The heat softens the grease and the paper
abaotbs it, and by changing paper will an!
iron occasionally all the grease die-
appeal . Soft newspaper or tissue paper
in preferable to cloth for cleaning lamp
cuimneys, windows, mirrors, etc., as it
leaves no lint; also for knives, spoons,
and tinware after scouring; and a stove
will not need blacking so often if now and
then rubbed with paper. Scraps of
writing paper or that used on one side
only may be utilized in several ways.
Jowls and glasses without covers msy be
J#ed f or jelly, by cutting a round of pa-
ptr the size of the top, dip in brandy
and plena down evenly upon the jelly,
cut another cover of softer paper large
enough to pa-te down on the outside of
the jar. Paper in bread and cake tins
protects the losf from burning, and in-
iures its eala removal from the tin. By
this help a tin with holes in it may be
used. Laid over a loaf of cake in the
oven, paper is also a protection; but un¬
less it is warmed first, the cake may set¬
tle. Cut in strips and curled with toe
scissors, writing paper makes a good
filling for piilows for hammocks, or the
large pillows sometimes used to show off
the elaborate “shams.” Postal cards and
thin pasteboard can be cut in strips for
lamp lighters. Newspapers for the same
use are cut in strips and rolled.—Anna
Barrows in Good Housekeeping.
The Cheese.
When I was abroad, says a traveler, I
saw, or rather smelled, cheese that was
as much more odorific than Limburger
as you can imagine. There are little
shopK in Germany that sell nothing but
cheese where it would make an American
sick to stick his nose. They have a sto¬
ry over there that an Fnglishman once
went into one of these little shops and
laid:
“Hi beg your pardon, you know, but
Hi’m bloody fond of cheese, you know,
hand Hi like it to smell strong, you
know. Hi f you ave hany that ia strong¬
er hit." than Limburger, Hi would like to taste
The old Dutchman is represented as
turning around and calling out to bis wife
in another room: .
“Katrina. Katrina, let d6r cheese valk
in.”
Gagged His Pupils.
A young schoolmtsfer named Traher,
at Numidia, a small village in Columbia
county, N. Y., is charged with punishing
talkative pupils by gagging stand them with
corn-cobs and making thorn on the
floor. It is said tfcat when a child oi
farmer George Snyder, thus treated, was
released, the cob was covered with l)lo( d
and the liitle one was so exhausted *s to
require assistance on the way home,
Snyder went in search of Traher with a
gun. but the young man had disappear¬
ed. It is feared that the boy will not re-
cover.
_
Tubpe ia a pool in Utah only ft foot
deep, and situated at a very high altitude,
that refuses to freeze even in the sever¬
est winters. There is another that mys-
leriously replenishes itself with half-
grown trout, t >ne stream, though clear
ts crystal lo the eye and taete’fBS stains
all the vegetation that it flows over a deep
brown. A warm spring near Salt Lake
City is the strongest sulphur water off, in the
world. A hot spring a few miles with
waters so hot that you can hardly put
your hand into them, ami as bright as di¬
amonds, is (me of the most remarkable
combination of chemicals ever analyzed.
E. L. Noyes, Iievere, Mass., was cured ot
scald-head by using Hall’s Hair Renewer.
A sure curs for obstinate coughs and colds—
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. The beat remedy.
m
TRADF^Io/mARK. TAR
> 6H8URE
Absolutely Emetics and Eoison.
Tree from Opiates,
SAFE. 25 QS
SURE. 5 -
PROMPT.
AT Dkhchimti and Pc ambus. KiiTiHonu, xn.
-rax ch sulks a. tooilzx co.,
17
BERManrpSeu/
W SI If! Cu-e* Blioum.tlsm, Neuralgia,
r r I Olil hricjk. fift* ci'NTa.
■ U# s ■ (Mize AT DR COO I STS AND DRXLKBA
THX CHAKLKS A. Vm.KI.KK ((l.,IIAi.TlH()ilt,HD.
Wrecks «r flnieanlty,
who have wasted their manly rigor and pow- de¬
ere by youthful rallies, laduotng mental nervous
bility, impaired memory, self-wnSdenee anxiety will
despondency, lack of and
power, weak back and kindred weakneawa,
•hould Illustrated addreas, with treatise 10 rente giving In stamne. Unfailing for
large of World's Dispensary Medical
mesiui cure. Main streftt, Buffalo, N. Y.
Association, 063
Cheek In a man is not admired, but what Is
nicer than a wo man's cheek.
The beet Ankle, Boot and Collar Pads are
made of zi nc and leather. Try them .
The man who rises by his profession—A
builder of eleva tors,
___
A Remedy for l.ang Diseases.
Dr. Robert Newton, late President of the
Eclectic College, of the city of New York, and
formerly of Cincinnati, Ohio, used I)R. ” M.
Hall’s Balaam very extensively in his prac¬
tice,as many of his patients, now living, and re¬
stored to health by the use of this invaluable
medicine, can amply testify. He always aaid
that so good a remedy ought to be prescribed
freely by every physician as a sovereign rem¬
edy in all cases of lung diseases. It cures Con¬
sumption, and haa no equal for all pectoral
complaints. ___
Cheerfulness has been called the bright an
sunny weather of th e heart.
A floppy Part.
What port is sought by every living creature If ?
Sup port. You cannot well make it your
lungs are not sound. Taylor's Cherokee Reiu-
edy of Sweet Uuin and Mullein will make them
so and cure your cough. _
Small and steady gains give competency and
a tranquil mind.
A Poor, Weak Sister.
who Is suffering from ailments physician, peculiar but know¬ to her
sox, dreading to go to ft
ing she needs medical help, will find la Dr.
Pierce’s "Favorite her prescription," strength and a preparation lit*
which will give restoration of all her new
through natural the and healthy action. It organs Is the to
their and re¬
sult of many scientific years ef physician, study who practice has made by a
these thoroughly troubles speciality. To he had of all
a
druggista.
If you are In a public office, be punctual—at
all events in leaving.
Mknsman's Pbftontzkd azzr TONIC, criirr the only
preparation of beef containing its nutri¬
tious properties. It contains blood-making
force.generating and life-sustaining properties;
Invaluable for and indigestion, all of dyspe ysia, nervoue
also, prostration, in enfeebled forms conditions, general debility;
all another the
result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, over¬
work or acute disease, particularly If resulting
from pulmonary complaints. New York. Caswell,Hazard A
Co.. Proprietors. Sold by druggists.
The pay of ladies in waiting to the queen is
$3,50# a year; that of lords in waiting $5,800.
To hresk tip colds and fevers, use early Dr.
Pierce's Extract of Smart-Weed.
Editor Stead, it is said, wears a yellow cap.
It’s English, you know .
_
Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh is agreeable to
It is not a liquid or a snuff. Sue.
Always ready to take a hand in conversa¬
and dumb people.
FORCOUCHS, CROUP AND
CONSUMPTION USE
V*-
RE
OF SWEET GUM AND MULLEIN.
The Sweet Gum from n tree of the same name
growing In the South, Combined with a tea made
from the Mullein p!»nt of the old fields. For sale
by WALTfitt all druggist* at to cents and $1.00 per bottle.
a. TAILOR, Atlanta, Ocu
Consumption Can Be Cured 1
WM. DR. HALL’S
lung's. BALSAM
Hoai>en*iA m lima. C'reup. the lSreathlnff Whoopi Or¬ 11 *
Cough, and all Dloeneen of .>l<*mbr»ne of
gans. JU soothes and hrali poisoned t»e by the tii«»
the JitingM, lolumed rnd the night and
enoe, and prevents iwf*ts
tlg itnrot an o*m the rh at wVeh ateomnuny
it. Co ‘■utiuttinii 1* not an Incurable uialndy.
HAM’S BALSA.>i will cure you, even
though i>r«■ te'Mional nid f«i«a.
s
CREAM ELY’S BALM CATARRH
whan applied into the nos¬
trils, will be absorbed,
eff actually cleansing the
haad of oatarrhal virus, V
causing healthy secretions.
It s lays inflammation, pro¬
tects the membrane from r
freah colds, oompletaly heals
the so res and restores the
senaei of taste and smell.
Hot a Lipid or Snuff. 1
A thorough few applications treatment reliere. will -,-r ^Vri JA-I
A ,
RdS^ULaP HAY-FEVER
ELY BROTH KR8. Druggists, Owego. N. Y.
Prize Holly Scroll Saw.
All Iron and Steel. Price, $S.OO.
GOOD FOR
BUSINESS.
GOOD FOR
AMUSEMENT.
GOOD FOR
ADULTS.
COOD FOR
YOUTH.
§«ND FOR CATALOGUE TO
SHIPMAN ENGINE MFB. CO., BoMcr, N. Y.
S QURE FITS'
ft time and thon ba made re them the renrs disease ef FITB, SvL.“ tw KPILinT
eal cure. I hare stsdy. I warrant my
or FALLING 8ICINBB8 a life long Because others hare
remedy to ewe the worst cases. receiving Bend aft
failed is no reason for not now a cure.
once fbr a treatise and a Fr*e Bottle of my lataUtM©
leiuody. Give Expreee and Post OfHce. It costs yon
gothlug lor a trial, and I will cure you. Start#*
Address Dr. H. « »UOT, 111 Peerl it,
The Happy Hour
A CH AIK HAMMOCK
T\ \\ The most delightful Ham
U mook over Invented, for eit-
colors ting or and reolining. ornamental. Infancy Oui
nvb cunt omen* are rapturous
Jr“^would LuAovur it. flays one: ‘‘#50 if
oould wanted. not buy min«i I
not get another.” Agents Ask your deal¬
er for it. Sample shipped to ar y address on receipt of
j|2 Write for circular. A mold «le Son* Honeoye,
No Ropft to Cut Off Horses’ Manes.
Celebrated ‘ECLIP.MK’ If A I.TKH .
and II It IDLE C ombined* canaot aP
be Slipped by any horse. Sample MM
Hnlter to any part of U. S. free, on
rece dpt of $1. Sold by all Saddlery,
Sped Har. dware lul discount and Harness to the Dealers Trade. .J'jKf'x
Send i for Price I Jut. 1 W** J
J. C. LIOIITIIOUHK, ?.
Kochnnfer, N. w——«
THE FAMILY TOILET RAMS?;;
Toilet Articles, Tooth Brushes, Pencil*. Penn, Pen
Holders, etc. Suitable for home or office, bureau,
desk, or wall. Gilt or silvered last a lifetime. Our
new Calendar for 1886 mailed free on application.
ASHJCV1LLK NOVELTY I J., Asheville, N. C.
WaterWHeels, and PO RTABL Millstones E MILLS
A.l. Prices DeLoaci nderfu k Hr Bro.,lllanta,Da. low. Send for
woi
large catal ogue. Mention this paper.
f ft ft J R|TCI\ |v At. active Man or Womar 8t, In every ***•
"" ° ur ROC 1 * r T
yjjjnS U ■ FRKrF g
Mm ranee. Canvassing outfit Particular*
V V free. Standard Silver-ware Co. Boston, Maaa.
____Oval Blair’s Bex, Pills. Srtal Rhaumitlo English Remedy. Gout aaS
91.00 i rtinj iW m*_
tBUIHUl Tho Original and
5 5?L.¥‘t* 1 ■T™" Only w Uruotaa iaitMio*...
l T!S *rtw-.
mMMmM
fS. 5 fc— s E E P ram s * *
r c s
Q
2l 2
fill, u
a
m i :f s
ii
1
i inniHitiM u BEST TONIC. *
3
Thl* medicine, combining Iron with pur*
vegetable tunica, quickly and completely
Cure* Impure Dyaprinla, Itlouil, IndlKcatlnn, Mnlnria, tVrak-
liras, Chilli
anil Fever*, and Nrui-nl|;tn.
It ia an unfailing remedy for Diseasea of the
Kidney It Invaluable and Liver,
U for Dlaeaws peculiar to
Women, 11 does and all who lead sedentary Uvea.
not In lure the teeth, cause headache or
produco It enriches constipation—odor Iron mtdicinet do.
and purifies Hie blood,
(naulatea the apitetite, aids the assimilation
of strengthens food,relieves Heartburn and Belching,and
the muscles and nerves.
For Intermittent Fevers, Lassitude,
hst-k of Energy, etc., it has no equal.
erSwadnSl^Unes'cm^wra'pper?
"■*« «aiy br Bstms chmucal co., eiLmori. ID.
illi" ha. '■. ■•1
Sgj
!
Invalids HoteliSurgical Institute
BUFFALO, 3ST- TT.
Organized with a full Stair of eighteen
Experienced and Skillful Pbyalelana
and Surgeons for the treatment of
i '1 Chronic Diseases.
OUR FIELD OF SUCCESS.
Chroufc Nasal Catarrh, Throat and
Lniif Diseases, Elver and Kidney
l>lneaees, Bladder Diseases, Diseases
of Women, Affections, Blood cured Diseasea hero and Nerv¬ home,
ous or nt and
with or without seeing the pntient. Come
see us, or Bend ten cents in stamps for our
“ Invalids’ Guide Book,” which gives
all particulars.
Nervous Debility, Impo>
Delicate and toney, nil Morbid Nocturnal Conditions Losses,
Diseases. caused by Youthful Fol¬
lies and Pernicious Soli¬
tary l'ractices nre speedily
and permanently cured by our
Specialists. Boole L post-pnid, 10 cts. In stamps.
Itiipture, or Breach, radi¬
| Rupture. cally cured without the knife,
without, trusses, without pain,
and without danger. Cures
Guaranteed. Book cent for
ten cents in stamps.
1*1 E.t: Tenuous and STHir TI RES
treated under guarantee to rare. Book
Bent for ten cents in stamps. Address World's
Dispensary Medical Association, 603 Main
Street, Buffalo, N. V-
t The treatment of many
Diseases of thousands ot cases of thon
diseases peculiar to
Women. WOMEN
»t the Invnlids' Hotel nnd
large Surgical in adapting Institute, remedies has af¬
forded experience
for their euro, nnd
»R. PIERCE’S
Favorite Prescription
Is the regfflt of this vast experience.
It Is a powerful Restorative Tonle
and the Nervine, and imparts vigor if and strength
to system, cures, ns by magic. Leu-
corrhea, flotvln painful or “whites,’’ menstruation, excessive
g, un-
uatura 1 suppressions, prolapsus or
falling of (no uterus, weak bearing- bark,
ante version, retroversion,
down sensations, chronic ulceration conges,
tton, 1 n f la in mat Ion nnd
of the womb, inflammation, pain
and tenderness in ovaries, internal
heat, and “female weakness.”
It promptly relieves and cures Nausea
and Weakness of Stomach, Indiges¬
tion, Bloating, Nervous Prostration,
and Sleeplessness, in either sex.
PRICE $ 1 . 00 , iS k° SSESS
Sold by Druggists for everywhe,- Dr. Pierce's Send
ten cents in stumps inrge
Treatise on Diseases of Women, illustrated.
World’s Dispensary Medical Association,
063 Main Street. BUFFALO, H. Y.
SICK-HEADACHE,
Bilions Headache,
Dizziness, Constipa¬
tion, Indigestion, Attacks,
and Bilious
promptly cured by Dr.
Pierce’s Pleasan* X
Purgative Pellets.
cents a vial, by Druggists,
PLAID SHAWL GIVEN AWA^l
•^"ssss^asfc there haa come into our band* * I*n?*
consignment of Plaid Sh»wl», prenntw p«r»*f*
goods, which wa proprm* to
th* ladies in tho following mMMr
fiend u* 55 esnts for 8 mo*. «nf»rrlp-
tion to Form and Household.*
roted large 82 Farm nngo and IllmtrsUd Household P*rf topki, T **^
to roiicellany, Aw*
Stories and general »n
willsend von onenf thmebcnutin**
shim U FRF.E P «■»
or ws will send 5 thswli * TC “»
scriptlona to one sdJreM for r t Ki
Batiafaction refunded. guaranty Addrets
OT money IlOrSEllhUH
FARM AM) Con*.
Hartford* -nu
IXTBllVOUSI
DEBILITATED JfcEK
Manhood, and all kindred troubles. Also for wsoy
other diseasea. Complete restoration to nealth. VI job
and Manhood guaranteed, bo risk Is Incurred. #7s— Insf
tratod pamphlet In *ru(Vd rnvrlope Marshall.Mu> mailed free,
dressing VOLTAIC) BELT DO..
Salvo CORES DflUHKENNESS
& e?t dot* < Us&ssernrssirS&Jsas?» for the Alcohol Habit and tl>«
©nil remedy that dare* to send trial
bottle*. Highly endorsed by the mod
©gl leal profession and prepared by well-
CP known stamps New for circulars York physicians. and references-
4ddr«as "SALVO REMEDY York
No. 3 West 14th St., New
0 an Hundreds __________edPdotLlitFn^ '^?^ in use. E8 Ifl nonary, mustm*-
LANE Sl BODLBY CO., CINCINNATI. O#
M 0 KPHINE 3 ASI
EASILY AtAHIIaY CURED. CUR HD. A PVIC K VUMWL
OR. J. C. HOFFMAN, Jeflerwn, WisoonsHt
race, null, Feet, and all their Un*
perfections, per nt, Superfluous including Hair, Facial Moles, Develop Warts*
me B1M
Moth, Freckles, Red Nose. Aene, traatment*
Heads, .John tears. Woodbury, Pitting 87 & N. tholr Pearl 8k, Alba-
Dr. BondlOo.forbook.
,N.Y. Est’bd 1STO.
mKKm WELL BORINGm 01H
THDRSTOrS peasITOOTH POWDER
*»»>!*« Tests Perfect ui Gams floatthr-
«i «*a» in nan tna ieed ia
the sales of that class or
almost remedies, universe! and has satitisc* gi*«s
Hoe,
causa Htriotar*. “ MURPHY BROSy Tee
SB Parii.
Mfdeeljr by the 6 has won the favor rask* «
^■iwiCMBlczlOo. the public end now
fth among' the leading
CmoinnauHOH cinesof the oildom.
A. L. SMITH. ^
Bradford. PA
Cold by Dru^ists.
^ KI CURES SO WHERE '.b CURE ALL ELSE FAILS, area#
•
Best Cough Syrup. Sold Tastes good. Us©
•- in time. by druggists.
CONSUMPTION V
A.N.V