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FOK THE FA KM AND HOME.
(Sclorllnit )ie«d I*o«nlo»».
Judging from experiments made at
the New York Experiment Station
last season farmers can increase the
yield of their poiato fields considerably
Ity selecting their seed from the best
tubers grown in those hills which
{yield the largest quantity. In the ex¬
periment alluded to “potatoes were
taken for seed from the most produc¬
tive and also from the least produc¬
tive hill, and planted the next spring
In regular and registered order. The
result was that the largest tubers from
the productive hill exceeded, by 16
per cent., the product of the largest
tubers from the least productive hill,
and the smallest tubers from the pro¬
ductive hill yielded slightly more than
the largest tubers from the least pro¬
ductive hill.’’ Whether a series of
experiments would show similar re¬
sults is uncertain, but as it will re¬
quire only a little extra labor at the
season of digging for farmers to select
the seed for their following crop from
the most productive hills, it is an ex¬
periment that all can afford to try.—
Cultivator.
Mnek as a Fertiliser.
The value of muck as a fertilizer is
a much disputed question. It is not
only in theory, but in practice, that a
difference of opinion exists. Cbemi-
cally muck differs very much, its ni-
trogen, for which it is mostly valued,
varying from 1 to 3 or 4 per cent.
Pure peat, which is wholly vegetable
matter, contains 3 per cent, and up-
ward of nitrogen, but is inert, and is
not plant food until it is made avail-
able by decomposition. Its condition
of decomposition, then, has much to
do with its value. The coarse, fibrous
peat requires to go through a decom-
posing process before it can be used as
manure, while the soft, black, buttery
muck breaks down into fine, rich blapk
soil very quickly, and in this condition
it has an immediate and. very useful
effect upon grass, to which it gives a
rich, deep green color and a luxuriant
growth. . _ Those who
are interested in
this question should first learn to dis-
tmguiah pure peat from the earthy.
sandy stuff which is often called
muck, but is really a very poor sub-
stitute for it. Pure peat contains
only 1 per cent, of a very light ash,
and the quality may be accurately
graded by the quantity of ash left
after it is burned .—New York Times,
Beautifying the Heinestead.
Beauty of arrangement about the
house has a marked effect upon the
inmates. What can make a place
more attractive than a nicely laid-out
garden in the midst of a well-kept
lawn? It does not suffice to set out a
few shrubs and ornamental trees
without regard to order or effect,
Landscape gardening is a greater art
than many lovers of attractive homes
realize, and a mistake is often made by
the “well to do” in not securing the
services of an experienced gardener,
when a new lawn is to be designed.
A clump of bushes here or a tree
there may materially impair the ar-
tistic effect oi the whole lawn; there is
a place for the roses, one for the lilies
and another for the shrubs. Attention
should be given the location of the
houses and the foreground kept quite
free from shrubs and flowers.
We believe that a great mistake is
made by farmers giving so little heed
to ornamenting the grounds in front
of the dwelling. The necessary time
and expense involved would be well
repaid by enjoyment secured from the
pleasing effects of such a lawn. We
would not in the least disparage ef-
forts in this direction by those who
cannot afford to employ an experienced
gardener. Almost any farmer could
materially improve the looks of a
place barren of shrubs and trees, and
should oe encouraged in any attempt
to do so .—Tribune and Farmer.
Cheddar Clteeae.
The process employed by Mr.
ris, an American, in ‘making Cheddar I
cheese at the Highland and Agricul- j
tural Society’s show at Aberdeen,
Scotland, is thus described in the North
British Agriculturist:
“In illustrating the Cheddar system, ’
Mr. Harris took the morning’s milk
supplied by the Aberdeen Dairy Com¬
pany, and after warming it up to 96
degrees, he let it stand about two
hours, till it cooled down to 86 degrees
when it was ripe enough to add the
rennet. To 58 gallons of milk he used
two ounces of rennet, and coagulation
was effected in twenty miDutes. On
Wednesday the vat was filled with 90 !
gallons of milk, and to this three oun¬
ces of rennet were used. Twenty min¬
utes after that he cut the curd—that
is to say, in forty minutes after ad¬
ding the rennet. Mr. Harris estimated
one pound of cheese to one gallon of
milk. One of the advantages of this
system, is that it enables a uniform
quality of cheese to be produced, it
is well known to practical cheese
makers on the Scotch Cheddar system,
that they never can guarantee an
equal quality of cheese two days in
succession. As in the case of the
working at Aberdeen, where the first
day’s curd was too small to make a
good sized cheese, and it had to be
mixed with the second day’s curd, the
benefit of uniformity acquired by Mr.
Harris’ method is very apparent. The
most improved utensils were used, in¬
cluding among other things, cheese
vats cased for steam and hot water,
steel curd-breakers, cheese-banders,
and tbs patent ieverless cheese-nrsaa,”
rtoAiigiiiK Climate Condition*.
The Hudson Hiver Valley (N. Y.)
peach-growers, it Is reported, will
aboudon peach-growing for good on
account of the untoward seasons and
a conviction that the climate is be-
coming more and more unfavorable to
that fruit. The restriction of loeaii-
ties adapted to peach-culture is yearly
becoming more and more confined as
cultivation carries the country away
from the peculiar conditions incident
to the original climate. Cultivators
are also finding year by year, what has
been long known to the few, that soil
and climatic conditions have much to
do with the successful raising of all
cropa This is especially noticeable
and generally known in the case of
tobacco, sorghum (when cultivated
for its sap), wheat, barley, sweet cher-
ries, peaches, grapes, and other plants
that might be mentioned. The West
Michigan, lake shore region is noted
for its wealth of fruit of all varieties
suited to a temperate climate, espeo-
ially peaches. The opposite or 1111-
nois shore is the reverse. Yet forty
years ago the vicinity of Chicago,
north, west and south, seemed excel-
lently adapted to peaches, as well as
the more hardy fruits. Winter wheat
also was generally cultivated, The
| cauge 0 ’ f the failure to raise peaches
ii es rao re in change of climatic condi-
tions than otherwise. The changed
so ii conditions also have operated
against the cultivation of wheat. The
w i ae cultivator is he who carefully
studies into causes and effects. There
jg n o calling in life in which more
careful study should constantly be
made than in agriculture .—Chicago
Tribune.
-
Hnnktld Hint*.
Cranberry jelly mixed with cold
water makes a refreshing drink for
sick persons,
Brooms dipped for a minute or two
i n boiling suds once a week will last
much longer than they otherwise
W ould.
A neat, clean, fresh-aired, sweet
an(] well . managed hoU3e exerci8e8 a
moral M weil a3 a physical influence
over lts inmates .
One can have the hands in soap
suds without injury to the skin if the
hands are dipped in vinegar or lemon
j uice Immediately after,
Milk contains all that is required by
the body, and the best proportions of
mineral matters; is less irritating than
other foods and better digested.
To make old lace appear new and
have it clean at the same time, give it
a bath of strong tea steeped in alcohol.
Don’t heat the alcohol but let the tea
stand in it for a day or so.
Mould can be prevented from form-
ing on fruit jellies by pouring a little
parafine over the top, and that, when
cool, will harden to a solid cake,
which can be easily removed when de-
sired,
Kosewood being in so much request
for furniture, we give a recipe for an
imitative stain, applicable to pine and
other plain woods, consisting of a
transparent rose pink liquid. Mix,
first, four pounds of potash in one gal-
Ion of hot water, adding same weight
of sandal wood. When the color of
the wood is extracted add two and
one-half pounds of gum shellac dis-
solved over a quick fire. Apply a
groundwork of logwood stains to the
wood and then the mixture,
Recipe a.
Bread-Crumb Omelet .—One pint
bread crumbs, one large spoonful
parsley, rubbed very fine, half a tiny
° n i 011 chopped fine. Beat two eggs
light, add a teacupful of milk, a trace
nutmeg, and pepper and salt liber-
ally; also a lump of butter the size of
a small egg. Mix all together and
bake in a slow oven, on a buttered pie-
plate; when light brown, turn it out of
the plate and serve at once.
Plum Pudding .—Six butter crack-
tolled fine and soaked in three pints
of milk. Cream, one-quarter of a cup
of butter with one cup of sugar; add
hal1 a teaspoonful of salt,one feaspoon-
ful of mixed spice and six well-beaten
eggs. Stir it all into the milk,and add
one pound of the best raisins. Bake in
a deep pudding-dish, well greased with
cold butter. Bake very slowly in a
moderate oven three or four hours.
Stir several times during the first hour
to keep the raisins from settling.
Fried Potatoes .—Peel them and
boil in salted water; do not let them boil
until they are soft Beat one egg and
have read y 80| ne fine cracker crumbs;
roll the potato in the egg and then in
the cracker and fry in butter until a
light brown turning frequently that the
color may be uniform; or the potatoes
may be dropped into hot lard. In this
case a cloth should be laid over a plate
and the potatoes should be drained
for a moment in this before sending
them to the table.
Jumbles .—One and one-half cup- 1
fuls butter, two cupfuls sugar, five j
8 ffg 3 > pints flour, one-half cupful ;
com starch, one teaspoonful baking
powder, one teaspoonful extract lemon,
one-half cupful chopped peanuts, mix-
ed with one-half cupful granulated
sugar. Beat the butter and sugar
smooth; add the beaten eggs,the flour,
corn starch and powder, sifted to-
gether,and the extract; flour the board,
roll out the dough rather thin, cut out
with biscuit cutter, roll fn the chopped
peanuts and sugar, lay on greased,bak-
ing tins j bake in rather hot oven
eight to ton mlnutoa,
CLIPPINGS FOK TilF CIKIOCS.
The emblematic flower of the Hin¬
doos is the marigold.
The pay of ladies in waiting to the
Queen is #3,500 a year, thatof lords In
i waiting 15,000.
The phrase “Christian name” arose
from the custom of the early Chris-
tians naming their children at bap-
tism.
Apaches have smoke signals by
day and fire beacons at night, and sys-
^ eUiS 0 f telegraphy understood only by
themselves. The displacement and
overturning of a few stones on a trail,
or a bent or broken twig, is a note of
war ning like the bugle call to dis¬
C i p ii ne d troops,
The magnitude of the Escurial. the
^ reat Spanish palace, may be inferred
from the computation of Fracisco de
los Santos that it would take four
days to go through all the rooms and
apartments, the length of way being
reckoned at twent y. three Spanish
, eaguM| which l9 about 120 English
miles. There are 14,00) doors and 11,-
000 windows in the edifice.
! A jack rabbit was the means of re¬
uniting a pair that had been separated
thirty-two years. The Rev. Colon
Anderson, of California, caught a rab¬
bit one night that was frightened into
submission by a lantern the dominie
carried. The story got into the papers,
was seen by his mother in Scotland,
whom he supposed long since dead,
and she wrote to him. The two re¬
cently had an affectionate meeting in
Scotland.
The Smithsonian Institution con¬
tains the small nugget of gold, a little
larger than a pea, that first met the
eyes of James Marshall in the sawmill
wali at Sacramento, and was the hegin-
Ding of those discoveries in Califor-
nia that have added nearly $1,500,000,-
00)10 the W0lll, ’ s styck ,)f precious
meta,s ’ The nugget is kept in a glass
ca8P ’ and i8 an object of curiosity to
all visitors
To bite the thumb at a person im-
P»ed an insuit; hence in “Romeo and
Juliet” Sampson says: “1 will bite my
thumb at thee, which is a disgrace to
thee if thee bear it.” The thumb in
this action, we are told, represented a
fig. and the whole was equivalent to
“A fig for you!” The term “To giva
or make the fig” as an expression of
insult has for many ages bsen very
prevalent among the nations of
Europe, and, according to Douce, was
known to the Romans.
Mnximilinn’s Ill-Stnrred Widow.
A writer in the London Figaro says:
When I was at Brussels a few weeks
ago, on one of my excursions to the
neighborhood of Lacken, I drove by
the chateau where the ill-starred
widow of the ill-fated Emperor Maxi¬
milian is passing her ruined life. I
met with a Belgian who told me much
about this victim of Napoleon’s insane
Mexican expedition. Though still out
of her mind, her mental condition has
much improved since the shock caused
by her dress catching fire a year or
two since. She is now comparatively
cheerful, though the danger of a re¬
turn to suicidal tendencies has to be
carefully guarded against. It is only
by exceptional acts that she reveals
her sad condition. Thus, one of her
peculiarities is the ever-present wish
when walking in the beautiful
grounds of the house which
her sister, the queen of Bel¬
gium, has placed at her disposal, to
search and pick up things from the
ground. Sho derives so much pleas¬
ure from this innocent pursuit that
her attendants purposely scatter about
things on the (tilths she generally
•chooses for her walks. She is particu¬
larly fond, it is noticed, of picking up
scraps of dead wood and small with¬
ered branches of trees, which, on re¬
turning to her apartments, she ar¬
ranges with marvelous taste in origi¬
nal forms. She often paints, too, and
there is not the slightest trace of hal¬
lucination in the landscape she pro¬
duces. Another occupation in which
she finds much pleasure is in prepar¬
ing the daily menu for her table. She
insists invariable or having two kinds
of soup served for her. It is sad to
learn, however, that of her complete
recovery there is no chance. She may
live for many years, but the doctors—
and she has had the best advice Eu¬
rope can afford —hold out no hope of
her mind ever being restored to its
normal condition.
A Crow that Counted.
Leroy, who, though he expresses the
opinion that “the nature of the soul
of animals is unimportant,” w as an
excellent observer, mentions a case in
which a mao was anxious to shoot a
crow. “To deceive this suspicious
bird the plan was hit upon oi sending
two men to the watchhous<\ one of
whom passed on, while the other re-
uiained; but the crow counted and
1' >t iter distance, i in* mxt day
luree went, and aga : shn perceived
that only two retired. In fine, it was
found necessary to send five or six
men to the watchhouse to put her
out in her calculation. The crow,
thinking that thi3 number of men had
passed out, lost no time in returning.”
From this he inferred that crows
could count up to four. Lichtenberg
mentions a nightingale which was said
to count up to three. Every day he
gave it three mealworms, one at a
time; when it had finished one it re-
turned for another, but after the third
it knew that the feast was over.
FOR HIMSELF AND FAMILY
Mr. Shy’s Wonderful Fight
with a Band of Apaches.
Single-handed, He Repulse* a Lrtrgo Body
of the Blood-thirsty Ho it ilea
Mr. Shy is a sturdy, plain-spoken,
Intelligent man, anil apparently una¬
ware that he has achiever! a feat unex¬
celled by any of the knights of ro¬
mance. He was just sitting down to
his dinner with his wife and boy, and
had one arm In a sling because of some
recent injury to the hand. lie heard
some slight noise in the yard, and
glancing through the window just in
his rear, he was horrified to see a
painted Apache stealthily creeping up.
Quick as thought he tore the banda¬
ges from his arm, sprang to the cor¬
ner of his room where his Winches¬
ter was resting, and seizing it wheeled
around just in time to receive the fire
of the savage, which he instantly re¬
turned. Mrs. Shy closed ami locked
the door at the same moment, and (he
Indians, seeing that they had a brave
man to light, placed themselves out of
view of the window and opened a rat¬
tling fire upon the house from all
sides. It was a flimsy frame struc¬
ture, and a bullet would go through
the walls as though they were paste¬
board. It was a terrible time for
about an hour inside of that little
house, with the pale, terror-stricken
wife and boy crouching in the loft and
the desperate ranchman crouching in
the room below, firing only when he
could see an Indian through the win¬
dow, listening to the angry zip of the
bullets as they tore through the thin
walls and whistled about his head.
After awhile there was a lull in the
firing. A few yards distant from Mr.
Shy’s house wts the house of Mr. A.
J. Yeater, his partner in a cattle
ranch, and who was at that time being
butchered, in company with his wife,
four miles away. The lull in the fir¬
ing was caused by the fact that the
savages had broken open Mr. Yeater’s
residence and were making themselves
merry eating and drinking and break¬
ing up the furniture. After getting
through with this they fired the house,
which in a few moments was a mass
of flames. Mr. Shy saw that his own
house would be on fire in a few mim
utes, and for a moment he was well
nigh paralyzed with despair. He
glanced at his wife and boy, and knew
from the ominous signs without that
the Indians were only waiting for the
flames to drive them out. In a mo¬
ment his house was on fire, and tell¬
ing his wife and boy to come down
from the loft, he prepared to open the
door and make a rush for safety for
some large rocks near by. Opening
the door he threw his body half way
out and fired full at a group of sava¬
ges; at the same instant he sprang
back withm the house. The next mo¬
ment at least a dozen bullets were
buried in tho door facing. The
flames were getting too hot, however,
to remain indoors, and Mr. Shy, telling
his wife and boy to follow him,sprang
out ide and made a rush for a large
rock near by. When he got within
about twelve feet of it, five savages
jumped up from behind it and fired
right in his face. l!y a wonderful
providence not a bullet struck him,
and he instantly started for smother
large rock, from which another group
of redskins fired si volley in his face.
A storm of bullets were whistling
around him from all sides, but he
seemed to bear a charmed life, and not
one of them touched him. He had
the presence of mind before leaving
the house to fill his pockels with cart¬
ridges, and he kept popping away at
the savages.
Out in the open and knowing that
he could no longer be tortured to death
like a rat in a hole, till sense of fear
left him, and lie actually assumed the
aggressive and ran the savages in a
body some distance away, where they
secreted themselves behind some large
rocks. He also placed himself behind
a reck, and ia this position wherever
he could see the body of an Indian ex¬
posed he fired at it. Meanwhile his
little boy had been shot down, and Shy
had kept the Indians so lm<y by his
own determined work that Mrs. Shy
had an opportunity to get up the gulch.
The wounded boy had crawled into a
thicket where his father had directed
him to go, hut not before his devoted
mother, fearlessly exposing herself to
the firing, had taken off one of her
skirts and wrapped it around the little
fellow. The heroic ranchman kept
back the savages until dusk, when
they retired. Meanwhile Mrs. Shy
had made a detour and started on a
trip for Deming, twenty miles away,
hoping to get assistance for her hus¬
band. The poor lady was found in an
exhausted condition late at night
struggling along the road about ten
miles from Deming. She was picked
up by a relief party of men who had
been notified by cowboys that Shy was
surrounded by a large (tarty of hostiles.
—Albuquerque (N.M.) Democrat.
Why He Got Weary.
“Bagstock, I pity you—I do indeed."
“Pity me, sir! ’
“I da You live such a useless ex
lstence. You are languid and weary,
and have no occupation in life.”
“You are mistaken, Mr. Budge. Mj
business is with my fellow man, T gc
about doing good.”
“Ah! That accounts for you getting
tired so easily.’*
A I’opulttr Murderer.
Last fall Peter A. Weaat, of Btreator,
HI., shot and killed Thomas B. Park*, a
wealthy merchant, because of the inti-
mocy between Parks and Mrs, Weasl.
He was sentenced to three years’ con¬
finement in the State prison. Last
week his little six-ypar-old girl died,
and Gov. Oglesby granted Weast per¬
mission to attend her funeral. Accord¬
ing to the local newspaper fully 1,500
persons assembled at the hotel to meet
nim. He received a veritable ovation,
over 600 people, among whom were the
Mayor, city officials, prominent mer¬
chants and prominent ladies, visiting
him and shaking liands with him m his
room. The church where the funeral
was preached, one of the largest in tho
tity, was filled to overflowing, several
hundred waiting outside in the bitter
oold until the services were over, and
then following the remains to the ceme¬
tery.
An Expert Sonnd-Reader.
Andrew Caruegle, the Pittsburgh
multi-millionaire, began his career as a
messenger boy in the office of the late
Col. Thomas A. Scott, and afterward be¬
came an operator Pennsylvania in the telegraph railroad. de¬
partment of the
He was an expert sound reader, and one
day when on the locomotive near the
telegraph office at Altoona he heard the
news come that a train had split in two
on a sharp grade a few miles away, and
that part of the train was coming along
like lightning. Carnegie train told which the en¬
gineer of a passenger was
waiting on the t-aek which the fugitive just
train would pass over. There was
time enough before the to switch off the passenger rattling
train runaway came
along.
Six gold medals have been given to SP
Jacobs Oil at \\ orld’s fairs and exposi*
tions, for being the best pain-cure. 1
is itself, better than gold. It curej
rheumatism and every other painfu
trouble. It never tails.
A Problem — The negro _ problem jus*
now is bow to lift a one-huDdred-and
fifty-dollar mortgage from his mule with
a fortv-dollar bale of cotton, and have
any mule left.
No depressing effects from Red Star
Cough Cure. No nausea, no danger of
poison. Safe, speedy, sure. Only twenty-
five cents.
A Curiosity.— A business man who
says that advertising does not pay. Joe
says he’s a uat’ral born fool.
How to Coke a Cold.—I’ ll cure any simplest cough
you ever heard of, and with one of the
remedies you ever raw; that remedy is Al¬
len’s Lung Balsam. It contains no opium, and
is perfectly harmless. Mothers can give it to
their children for croup with perfect Druggists. safety.
Price, 25c., 50c. and $1 per bottle, at
Only three years during the last fifty have
the revenues of Brazil exdfeeded the expend¬
itures.
___
Florida. “The Land of Flowers,”
is a paradise for the invalid, and the “Foun¬
tain of Youth” was once thought to he hid in
one of its forest glades. It is now the haven of
many consumptives, who tind benefit in her
sumptlve genial warmth and fragrant flowers, The c.in-
invalid need not necessarily go so far
from home and friends to get relief. For if
not In the last stages of the diseage. Dr. R. V'.
Pierce’s “Golden Medical Discovery” will re¬
store to perfect health. For all ehr nic throat,
bronchial and long diseases it is a most relia¬
ble specific. By druggists.
Small and steady gains give competency and
a tranquil mind.
“Better late than never,” but better never
late when troubled with a eongh or cold. Take
Dr. Bigelow’s all Positive lung Cure troubles at once, speedily which
cures throat and
and thoroughly. Pleasant for children, 50
cents and $1.
The best Ankle, Boot and Collar Pads are
made of zi nc and leather. Try them .
Why Uncle’s Fat Wife.
is the letter p like uncle's fat wife go¬
ing up hill? It makes ant pant (aunt), and
cooling off too soon produces coughs and colds.
Taylor’s Mullein Cherokee her Remedy of Sweet Gum and
will cure
The pay of ladies in waiting to the queen is
$3,508 a year; that of lords in waiting $5,600.
It outrivals all—Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy.
There is no disease so dangerous as the want
of common sense. .
The purest, sweetest and best Cod Liver Oil
n the world, manufactured from fresh, healthy
livers, upon the seashore. It is absolutely pure
and sweet. Patients who have once taken it
I ,n /cr it to all others. Physicians have de¬
cided it superior to any of the other oils in
market. Made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New
To err is human, but you make no mistak e if
you use Dr. Jones’ Red Clover Tonic for dys¬
pepsia, costiveness, bad breath, piles, pimples,
ague and malaria, poor appetite, low spirit*, or
diseases of the kidneys, stomach and Uver. 60
cents.
Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh is agreeable to
use. It is not a lixuid or a snuff. 50c.
RedS TRADE'/,/ MARK. TAR
Free from Opiates, uiOHOtuiciy Emetics
and Poison.
SAFE. 25^-
SURE.
PROMPT.
At Dkhwjibtb ani> Dealcrs.
THB CH AR LES A. VOGKLER CO., BALTIMORE, MP.
CTJACOBS on
P GERmAnBOT ft ! Cwes Rheumatism, Neuralgia,
L Ul ft „ 1^ U| r Cllll O — I „ PW^rFIF^cifcNT*. Headarhe, Toothaoha,
" ■ W ° **■■■ AT DRUGGISTS AND OEALKRS.
THE CHARLES A. YOGELHIl r«).. 1 r.TMfORE, MD.
MUSTANG
Survival of the Fittest.
A FAMILY MBDICIHB THAT HAS HBALBD
MILLIONS DURING 85 TEARS[
A BALM MAN FOR EVERY WOUND Of|
AND BEABTI
The Oldest & Best Liniment
BVER MADE IN AMERICA.
SALES LARGER THAN EVER.
The Mexican Mustang Liniment has
been know n for more than thirty-five
ye.ara us the best of all Liniments, for
Man and Beast. Its sales to-dav are
larger than ever. It cures when all
others fail, and penetrates skin, tendon
and muscle, to the very bone Bold
everywhere.
X
We oannot, renew youth, hut wn okn prevent
gray hair by u»in« Hall’, Hair Kenewer.
Ayer’, I’lll* are a never-failing remedy toi
headache,, canned by a disordered atomacli.
The devil can never lie entirely crushed
while the mule lives.
_
Mother’, Hinlle, nre the Kiinllaht of Home.
There would be lower honaehold, cloud-, and brighter
sunshine In many if every d eplr-
ited. suffering woman realized what a boon
Hr. Pierce', and “Favorite maladies Prescription" to wiiich her t» fot all is
weaknekse, who wonderful sex
liable. No lady disappointed gives this by
remedy a trial will be the re¬
sult. It not only act, uromptly by ft, upon ui] nervine func¬
tional derangement,, strengthen, DUt rare and repair,
a id whole tonic properties feminine system. Price reduced
the dollar. druggists. to
one By
guest inn for debaters—“Can a man, while
asleep m the daytime, have the nigh tmare"
Reamed from Dentil.
Wm. J. Loughlin, of Somerville, Mass., say-
“In the fall of 1878 I was taken with Busbdino
of Longs followed bv a severe cough. I lost
my appetite and flesh, and wa, confined to my
bed. In 1877 I was admitted to the Hospital.
The doctor, said I had a hole in my lung a,
big as a halt dollar. At one time a report went
around that I was dead. I gave up hop., but
a friend told me of Du. Wmi Q ALL’S Balsak
roil tub Lungs. I got a bottle, when to my
surprise, I oommenced to get well, and to-day
I feel better than for three years.”
Id ii I
re Bit
E
«
3
>•
llfli B
itllTiiili;li Is
1
'
W Ul I... BEST TONIC.
vegetable This medicine, combining Iron with pure
tonics, quickly and completely
Cures Impure Dyspepsia, llloutl, Indigestion, Malaria, \Veak-
nen. Chill.
slid Fever., and Neuralgia.
It is an unfailing remedy for Diseases of the
Kidney and Liver.
It is invaluable for Diseases peculiar to
W omen, and all who lead sedentary lives.
1 1 does not injure the teetli, cause headache,or
produce constipation —other Iron medicinm do.
it enriches and purities the blood,
stimulates the appetite, aids the assimilation
of food, relieves Heartburn and and Belching, and
strengthens the muscles nerves.
For Intermittent Fevers, Lassitude,
Lack of Energy, etc., it lias no equal.
tw The genuine has above trade mark and
crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other.
n«d« only bj snows (it mo a i t o., mi.TtsoitF. «n.
FORCOUCHS, CROUP AND
CONSUMPTION USE
jhfjM
rE mEDY
OF SWEET GUM AND MULLEIN.
The Sweet Gum from a tree of the same name
growing from in Mullein the South, Combined with a tea made
the plant of the old fields. For sale
k V. iF s S.S.
Relieved at Last!
“We know a gentleman in this countv who, six
months ago, rheumatism. was almost a He hopeless could cripple scarcely from hobble an
attack of
across the room, used crutches, and said him¬
self that he hail little if any hope of ever walking recovering. about
We saw him in our town last week,
as lively as any other man, and in the finest health
and spirits. Upon our inquiry as to what had worked
such a wonderful change in his condition he replied
that S. S. S. had cured him. After using a dozen and
a half bottles, he has been transformed from a mis
ecable cripple to a happy, healthy man. He is none
other than Mr. E. B. Lambert /*—Sylvania Telephone.
Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free.
The Swift Specific Cq„ Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga., or
157 V ‘i3d St., N. Y.
CREAM ELY’S BALM GOTH
^-7^
causing It hsalthy inflammation, secrntiona. eSoIi iff A
a iays pro- WU nor! iVTCVTD
tecta the membrane from F
Iresh me sores colds, and completely restores heals the jfr' WBBp
/
sensei of taste and smell. SIM /
NotaLignid or Snuff,
A thorough few applications reliave.
A treatment will
c’ure. Agreeal ciroul “s“ HAY-FEVER
Send for ar 6C
ut drufgists, or by m
ELY BROTHERS, Druggists. Owego, N. T.
Salvo CURES DRUNKENNESS
^ but effectually. Intemperance, not instantly,
dote The only scientific anti¬
for the AI cell ol Habit and the
only remedy that dares to send trial
bottles. Highly endorsed by the med-
leal profession and prepared by well-
Ey*. dH %0 known stamps Now for York physicians. Send
Address circulars and references.
“BALVO REMEDY,”
No. 2 West 14th St, New York.
A Ilfs •xpsrieace. Remarkable aad quick cores. Trial paek
ages. Sead Stamp for sealed particulars. Address,
Dr. WARD A CO.. LOUIS IANA, B O.
Water Whesfs. MUfstsiiis^i “ >■
and portable mills
A.i. DlLoactT k Bro., Atlanta, Oil m 1
Prices woi nderfully low. Sena tor^
large caul •gua. Montiaa this paper.
In SALESMEN neighborhood—-either WANTED
home—Dickey’s every to travel or sell at
Indian Blood and Liver Pills. Apply
now,giving reference. John K. Dickey,B ristol, Tenn.
Mr DO YOU |/rrn nrPQQlf so send for
llo you fVRfit to|\C" r DC.ro four illustrated
Price List of Simplicity Hives. Honey Extractors, Sec¬
tions, thing needed Comb Foundation, in Modern Smokers, Bee Bee-Books <fe every¬
J. M. Culture. Nothing Pat¬
ente d. Jenkin s, We tumpka, Elmore Co., Ala.
Face, perfections, Hands, including Feet, end Facial all their Develop¬ im¬
ment, Superfluous Hair, Moles, Warts,
'Mm Moth, Heads, Freckles, Red Nose. Acne, Bl’k
'fwl-Ur. Scars, Pitting k their treat meat.
John Woodbury, 37 N.Pearl St.Alba-
ny.N.Y. Est’b'd 1870. Send 10c. for book.
Ul * N'ewftrk.N.J. A Court*Mjj, book worth Send rent $ll>. .tatnj»s free on L||j I A|ip W g*
anITTW»'«* 111 lUlU' ll WHISKY w, !liout HABITS jpnl'i. Book enroll of
Wl mil* vv‘j>o{^I.KY?M /^Atlanta, Q»
.
Tools and rock
NYMAN.TIFFIN.OHIO. for all kinds of Well
A A R ULU P N T I O Q WANT Household to Artule. For a Good“H«|M„^
M Send ireo-
A. GOHRINQ A
Blooded Cuttle, Sheep, Hoes,
U N°?.
Rlai/c BlHir 5 ■ PSIla 111 Si Great Rheumatic EnijlisN Remedy. Gout an«
___*• *# • I .UOirwI, 60 cts.
PATENTS Patent Lawyer, Inventor.’Guide Obtained. (lend (tamp L. Bin. for
Waabiuatou. D. 0.
+‘25~CT3€;
fSSLICKER*3* .H"n't waste SLICKEF
is absolutely yonr money on a gtmi or rnhbercn«t The FISH BRAND
nim am. «ji.ratifi w jn^ ?ialogi'iejo fkooh. and a"! will l'‘iPW'FB.a)'simmonVs’t'j ke^p you dry in the hardest H* ffi/W- sto™,
nglhayethe^i.H wh o", send fnrdevrtnttveV
’S
CUBIS WHIR! AU USE FAILS.
Befit Cough Byrup. Tnstee good. Use
time. Hold hy dniggiBtB.
PHYSlCIANS AND DRUGGISTS RECOMMEND IT.
LjJITS; — a
t® 25 ----- 28
CENTS ° os. ±u%£¥
tor for —
Cough
\c
oa
THE BEST AND CHEAPEST
COUGH or CROUP
REMEDY.
AS AN EXPECTORANT IT HAS NO EQUAL
It Contains no Opium In Any Form.
ALLKN’H 43 M MJ HA 1.8AM in Three M n
BhUIm. I'rloe Bottles Out*. 30 (>nt«»ud SI Per Home.
Th« 2ft C<mt arc put up for the accommodation
of ati who deairt) b< triply a CoUffh or Croup Remedy.
Those LUNG dftHlrliiK DISEASE ft remedy should for CONSUMPTION the large $1 bottles. or ftny
secure
Price, 25c., 50c. and $1 per Bottle.
SOLD BY ALL MEDICINE DEALERS.
_ 7.
2,.0'1".‘ z
_
“Plso's Cure for Consumption saved my life."—
L. L. Whipl c, Druggist. Kintuer, Mich.
“Will buy no other Cough, Medicine as loug as we
e&n getPiao’s Cure.”—C. B. Lariuku, Kirkwood, 111.
35 (j T};
» —_
"PiBo'g Cure cured me of Consumption/’—W m. ft
Robertson, Brandywine, Md.
M *.„!
'‘Plso's Cure tor Consumption is the best medicine
weaver ueed.”—O. L. Ropeb, Abilin*. Kane.
. Hm
“Piso's Care for Consumption in doing wonder* for
me.”—H. H Stanskul, Newark, N. Y.
ws—«N
y fcC.
Consumption Can Bo Cured !
WM. Dh. HALLS
lungs. BALSAM
rures Itlfsu^nei Consumption. ! AM^ima, ^Ptieiijinonlae^fn-
Croup, Hrenthing Whooping Or¬
Cough, and at i I>isesiae» ol «he ot
gan*. it soothes and h^ats i-e Membrane
th** Lung*. Inflamed and poisoned night by the and dis¬
ease, and prevents the sweats
tightness across the < h st which accompany
ir. A o- 'Uiiiption i* not ail Incurable malady.
KIALI’S BALSAM will cure you, even
i hough pri le-sionat aid falls.
NEHVOTJS
HBy^ataS DEBILITATED L_J. MsT
You are allowed a free trial of thirty days Of the UBl
of Dr. Dye’s Celebrated Voltaic Belt with Electric Sus¬
manent pensory Appliances, of A’crrous for Debility, the speedy loss relief Vitality and p«j>
cure of ana
Manhood , and all kindred troubles. Also for many
other and Manhood diseases. guaranteed. Complete restoration No risk is to incurred. Health, Vigor, Illus¬
trated pamphlet in sealed envelope mailed free, by ad-
dress ing VOL TAIC BEftTCOwM arshall. Mich.
I When CURE I I FITS!
gay cure do not mean merely to stop them
for a time and then have them return again, I raeMtft
radical cure. I have made the disease of FITS, ffPI-
LEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS a lifelong study. I
warrant others have my failed remedy is to cure the for worst not cases. receiving Because ft
i no reason now
cure, Send at once for a treatise and a Free Bottle ot
my It cost ini >stsyou fallible nothing remedy. for Give trial, Express and I will and Post Offloa,
Address Da. H. ROOT, a 113 Pearl core Kew you. Terlfc
G. St.,
The Happy Hour
\ i\ CHUR The most delightful HAMMOCK Ham-
n m ick ever invented, for slt-
\\ ting or reclining. In fanoy^
IS® colors and ornamental, our
turners are raptnreui ad¬
over them. Sent to aay $8.00
will dress for $2.00. For
we send it to any R. R, Nation east of the Territories
Freight ;or eircular. Prepaid, Special and terms guarantee I.uraw tafe arrival. Dealer*- S«na
t.» T.
C. ARNOLD dc HOY, Ifonseye, Nf.
No Ropo to Cut Oft Horses' Manas.
Celebrared ‘ ECLTPSK ’ HAI.TKK
and BRIDLE Combined, cannot A
be Slipped by any horse. Sample
Halter to any part of U. S. free, on
receipt of $1. Sold by all Saddlery, jff&S
Special Hardware discount and Harness to the Dealers Trade. f\t» .^aS^ H
8end J. for C. Price LIGHTHOUSE, List. UKmw^L VT* J 9 \
__Rochester* N. Y . w ■ ■ <e F _
T\rANTED v v cut saws, Immediately to send for free 76,000 circular^ Men who describing use orosg- our
New Combined Saw-sot and Saw-jointer. The most
complete, convenient and useful tool ever invented for
the purpose. Its jointing feature alone worth mow
than with price full instructions of entire tool. for perfect Price saw of entire dressing tool only post-paid $1.00.
Address "Challenge Saw-set Oo.," Meadyule, P»-
Superfluous 7 Hair LADIES! permanently dissolved at once
It ( STS promptly developed in natural manner.
REGULATING LUJUORRII PILLS. Always safe and sure.
^aled particulars EA, Worst cased cured In 8 days-
CHEMICAL 6 cts. in stamps.
CO. 017 Broadway, New York-
w stamp, nish own ------ ANTED Work have homes. steady good sent Cbown -----light demand by employment. $1 mail. Mjra.Vo.&i Lai.ies to R2 for No and a our canvassing day VlneSt.,Cln.U. work work, Address, Gentlemen easily at ana made. their with fur¬ VA’e to
m - --ONLY
______VOIJ8NE88, MANHOOD. DEBILITY, XKK
WEAKNESS. >•
quackery. Book mall, SKA INDISPUTABLE FKKE. PROOFS*.
KItIA by MEDICAL I,El). CO., BUFFALO. N. Y.
MORPHINE Chloral mi
EASILY CURED. nn>
DR. j. C. HOFFMAN, Whoeesfc
THURSTOITS KTuuTH PQWDSB
tt Hiiig T—II Perfect mm d Uaa u Hsmltk y
PENSIONS to Soldiers A Heirs. Send stftfflP
for Circulars. COL. L. BlNO- DJD^
HAM, Att’y, Washington,
QP\fh U NAMK Book on QUICK Dross Making, for Prof. New Moody’. Dolman, New and kapti*
^Catting, etc. Agenta aell 10 a day. l’roMlOOI)¥,llnaiaa*W'U'
PENNYROYAL “CHICHESTER’S PILLS
The ENGLISH.”
OrlKlual and Only Urnnlna.
•*'* Reliable. Bew.reor w „rthlre«
"• ,or particulars in letter by return
NAME PAPER. Chichester <Kemtral C#.,
1 8 MadUen Nquara, I'Allad*, r*
*? *•**• ld . bj Kn*IUK J l>r Y*f ,,,Ul M Pennyroyal ^▼ery where. Pills. A«k for “Chicks*
Taka nc
N. U. Ten,
SCP'S CURE FOR
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
Beet Cough By run. Taste* good. Use
In time. Bold by druggists.
nrjm_ It) M P YLO N
ftiS QCU R E : RCXR
CURES WHtKfc ALL 1151 FAILS.
Be*t Cough Byrup. Tastes good. Use
in time. Sold by druggists.
CON S U M PT
PtSO-’o CURE F Of<
r if'*
CO N SUMPTION
SE
GORES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
in Cough time. Syrup. Bold by Tastes druggists. good. Use
m
w SI? fair]
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
IWst ' ■ ■ r :\>\ Tastes good. Use
in rime. Soid^H by druggists.
3 Alsh n iolJ
CURES WHERE AU ELSE FAILS.
In Cough time. Byrup. Sold by Tastes druggists. good. Use
I .— l
5L; ‘ r
3.2.71 I‘TS.
— >
I
7‘,» P “T139
—_ z .
— I
f. 5 :,T§..
5 “T-’?5._
l ‘;,_4: ,l
2“! "TS.