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THE FARM AND GARDE!!
' Tula LssShdls-
if the egg shells are thin it is a sign
that lime is lacking in the food, or often,
if this occurs in winter, that fowls can¬
not get to the ground to fill their giz¬
zards with gravol needed to digest food
properly. Leghorn hens and other per¬
sistent layers generally have very thin -
shelled eggs despite all precautions iu
feeding. Many losses of eggs while un¬
dergoing incubation occur from this
cause. To prevent eggs from being thin-
shelled it is better to give milk and
wheat middlings mixed rather than re
ly on fowls eating a sufficiency of lime
in any form. If egg shells are fed they
should be pounded so fino that all ap¬
pearance of the egg will be destroyed.
More fowls learn to eat eggs from hav¬
ing nearly whole shells thrown to them
to peck at then from any other cause.
I’rmntlni Horses from tVaillug Hay.
We have a favorite family buggy
horse, says a letter to the Indiana Farmer,
who, although very kind, gentle aud
trusty, and possessing au extraordinary
degree of good common horse sense,
nevertheless has some minor faults, one
of which is wasting hay by pulling out
too much for a mouthful and dropping
some of it on the stable floor. We tried
various plans to prevent this wasting
process, but none of them accomplished
the desideratum intended, until we
studied out the following, to wit:
We took two pieces of heavy scantling
four inches square and about four feet
long, and made a rectangular frume of
them by nailing a strong slat across
them both, near the ends, making each
frame of the proper width to easily tit
the inside of the mtingor for hay.
This frame is long enough for
one end to be pushed under the feed
box of the right hand end of the man¬
ger which serves to hold the frame in
proper position, on the hay, when the
manger is filled with hay, Sai'd frame
is about nine inches wido between the
side pieces;the width I guessod at, and
find it answers the purpose very well,
being wide enough to allow tho horse to
pull out enough hay for a mouthful, and
no more. When filling tho manger
with fresh hay, J stand the frame on
end next the feed box; letting it lean
against the box; then, when the
manger is Ailed, I lav tho frame down on
the hay and press it down well in the
manger on top of the hay. As the horse
eats out tho hay the framo sinks down,
keeping the hay in place and preventing
the horse from pulling out too much and
wasting it. Any farmer can make such
a framo as this; ail it requires is the side
pieces and slats, a saw, a hatchet or
hammer, and a few fencing nails.
Makincr €iood ftftikerg*
No matter what breed you have, says
n writer in the Practical Farmer, some¬
thing further is necessary in order to
reacli the best success in raising good
milkers. Good blood, whether Short-
horn, Jersey, Devon, Ayrshire, grade or
native, is not everything, but lies at the
foundation. Something cannot come
from nothing. Treatment in raising a
milker should be something different
from that in raising a beef animal or an
animal for labor. Begin as soon as tlie
calf is a day old; see that it has suffi¬
cient to eat and is kindly treated and
regularly attended to. Never pamper
or overfeed, but give it good, generous
food, to cause a regular, early and steady
growth. Accustom it to be handled,
but not to such au extent as to acquire
objectionable habits as a cow, but rather
to be fond of the presence of the keeper.
Kindness Helps to create a quiet disposi¬
tion so important in a dairy cow, and
this education must begin when the calf
is young. Any habits acquired when
young are apt to cling to the cow when
grown. For a milker I would have the
heifer come in at two years old. 8 hc is
then old enough to become a cow. 1
would not, as a rule, allow her to go
farrow, but milk her up to within a few
weeks of calving, even if I did not
obtain but little ut a milking. A cow
thus trained will give more milk and be
more likely to hold out long in milk if
her after caro is judicious and liberal, as
ft riPflufr
au older bull—one, two or threeyears
older than she is is preferable to a vearl-
ing—and better stock is likely to come
fromsuch. After the heifer has come
in her feed should be regular and 11 b-
eral. ' Good ~ clover -
hay is the best of all,
but we all may not have this for stall
seed; then we must make up for what is
lacking in some concentrated food, such
as oatmeal, shorts, oilmoai or the like
but great caro and good judgment rnunt
be used not to overfeed.
Farui nud Garden at.itee.
Don’t compel your horses to eat musty
hay. It will produce fatal lung
trouble, and, in any event, heaves.
Secretary Goodman, of the Missouri
Horticultural Society, Rays a good toad
is worth $10 in a garden as au insect
destroyer.
At a recent exhibition in England,
where prizes were given for walking
horses, the speed attained was over five
milos an hour.
There is no use of a chick or hen
having the gapes for 24 hours. A few
drops of camphor and water down the
throat is a sure cure.
Poultry should have a certain propor¬
tion of salt in their food j as well as ani¬
mals, as it is necessary to the promo¬
tion of health and thrift.
An Ohio fruit-grower says lie finds
raspberries not an expensive crop to
raise, but that they require a great deal
of vexatious and tedious labor. He
netted $120 from an acre of blackcaps in
one season.
Farm implements, when occasionally
briuhed over with crudo petroleum, will
lust longer and be protected from
changes of weather when exposed.
the ground freezing, but to prevent
sudden changes or freezing and thawing.
The farmer who does not fence in his
•lock-when living along the line of a
railroad, not only run* the risk of losing
valuable animals but endangers the
lives of travellers.
For wet lands a goods mixture for
pasturngo would bo rod-top, eight
pounds; alsikc, six pounds; meadow
fox tail, four pounds, and rough-
stalked meadow, six pounds.
Hbeep require careful watching, for if
they get into trouble of any sort, as get-
ting down in gullies or fastened in be-
tween logs or fence rails, they become so
frightened or discouraged they succumb
at once and die.
See that the cellars where vegetable®
and fruits are stored are secure. Thou-
sands of bushels ol these valuable food
articles are lost through neglect. The
cellar should not be very warm >‘ or
should it be freezing cold.
Cows need light, not only for their own
health and comfort, but because good
butter cannot be made from the milk of
cows kept in dark stables, Air, light,
cleanliness and warmth are four essen¬
tials of a cow stable where cows are kept
for profit.
If your garden plot is selected rake it
over as soon as the weather will permit
and burn up every vestigo of grass and
weeds, so as to destroy not only seeds,
but insects. A covering of straw, leaves
or stalks, burning over the ground, will
be an advantage.
Ten parts each of oats aud corn, und
one part of oil-cake, ground together,
make a good feed for horses. It will give
a fine sleek coat, and will at the same
time make a horse very healthy. It wil
also render horses less liable to contract
colds and diseases.
The New England Farmer says that
wheat is one of tho best grains for poul¬
try and, at present prices, one of the
cheapest. Where one grain is selected
for main dependence let it be good, sweet
wheat; it gives growth and egg material
above any other grain.
The highest apple orchard in the
United Stutes is reported to be at Hot
Springs, Lake Tahoe, Cal, The trees
bear well, This is said to bo the
greatest altitude at which this fruit is
grown in this country, being over 6,200
feet above tho level of the sea.
Have you better horses on your farm
now than you had this time last year!
If not, why not? The way to improve
stock is to get rid of tha inferior and
introduce better blood. If you arc not
doing this you are not likely to make
much headway in the right direction.
Some of the largo mutton breeds of
sheep, such as the Oxfords, often shear
from 1 l to 20 pounds of wool, and
this fact, with their ability to attain
very heavy weights, should be a strong
inducement to farmers to use rains of
mutton breeds for crossing on the native
ewes.
The Ohio Agricultural College states
as the results of experiments there in
soiling cattle that half the number of
acres will feed the same amount of
stock mid keep them in better condition
if the product be cut and placed before
them. Nevertheless soiling is not every¬
where profitable.
A writer in tlie National Stock mail
says that he would rather have one acre
of oats put in before the middle of
March than two acres tho last half of
April. He has sown oats in February
and had the land frozen solid for
weeks after, and with the first warm
weather they came up and made it much
heavier crop than those sown later.
Chinese Religions.
There are three great systems of re¬
ligion known iu China: the Confucian,
the Buddhist, and the Taoist. Of these,
the first—"Confucianism—teaches the
worship of heaven, that is the visible
heavon—the sky, as the source of light,
heat ami moisture; the worship of an-
i, ^ /,, Qf Iffy{ ^
llKIU who(JiJnol;ori ____
" ! ’ g in, ‘ te .butadopt-
et, tlu ‘ m - H'loed, ancestor worship is
“ n,vcr8al la china ; Buddhists and Ta-
01st8 > 08 wel1 M ‘l>e foiiowers of Confu-
U9 ’ plactice i4 ’ A1! members of tlie
literary, r or student, class tind all officials
are required to be Confucianisls
The Confucian system allows womei no place
in its ritual, or service, for ,,r
children, who never worship i» or enter
the temples. The great central building
of this cult is the magnificent “Temple
of Heaven” at Peking, in which tlie
Emperor of China, as the “Sou of
Heaven,” is the only priest. A very
Serious punishment would be inflicted
upon any one who should carry a female
infant within the park which surrounds
this sacred edifice.
The Taoist*, few in number, have
many gods, like the ancient Greeks and
Romans. They worship the gods of the
wind, rain, thunder, lightning, fire; of
the rivers, springs, iukes, and water-
courses; of the hills and tlie mountains.
These are represented in their temples,
not by idols, but by “tablets,”—strips
of wood two or three feet long and as
many inches wide,—upon tlie face of
which ate inscriptions like this: “Sacred
to the spirit and invihciblo m.'ij sty of
the God of tlie Lightning.”
Buddhism is the popular religion of
the Chinese. It embraces [:i majority of
the men, and all tlie women and chil¬
dren. The Taoists often call it, , iiecr _ j
ingly, a foreign religion. This is ttue,
as Buddhism was introduced into China j
,
i rout India about ninetec 1 hundred
years ago. [ Y outh's Companion. I l
CLIPPINGS FOR TIIE CURIOUS.
A rhymed version of the Bible in 260,-
000 verses is out.
—
Mrs. Eunice Darling of Hersey, Me.,
aged one hundred and one years, knits
apair of stockings every day and attends
to her household duties.
Great Britain makes from hot own or-
chords 220 , 000,000 gallons of cider rut-
nually, .11 and . j imports about i . 600,000 bat- ,
i<d» of apples from tho United States,
The longest span of wire in tho world
is used for a telegraph in India over the
river Kistnah. It is more than 6000
feet in length, and is 12,000 foot high.
An English Agricultural paper tells
of a duck whose egg-lnying record is ns
follows: In 1878 she laid 211; in 1870,
143; in 1880, 145; in 1881, 155; in
1882, 84; in 1883, 30; total, 709.
The highest spot inhabited by human
j beings is said to be the Buddhist cloister
i of Ilnnie, Thibet, wlicru twenty-ono
priests live at an altitude of 16,000 feet,
I Tho highest fountain in Europe is tha
' in the gardens of Chatsworth, tho scat of
i the Duke of Devonshire. Tho height of
this famous jet is 267 feet,
The albatross is the largest sea bird
known, and weighs all the way from
twelve to twenty-eight pounds. Its
wings are of enormous length, usually
about eleven feet. On account of its
motions and voracity it is often called
by sailors the maa-o’-war bird.
Alfred Tennyson has been England’s
poet laurete since 1830, a longer period
than the honor was held by any of his
predecessors. Colley Cibber enjoyed
tho distinction from 1730 to 1757, and
Robert Southey from 1813 to 1843; all
the others, from Edmund Spenser down,
for much shorter terms.
A specimen of the vibikari, or sacred
snake of Japan, in Dr. Stradling’s collec¬
tion at AVntfi>rcl, England, recently gave
birth to between sixty and seventy young
ones. Some fifty living and still-born
smikelcts were collected, and it was be
lieved that at least a dozen more had
been destroyed by other snakes in the
cage. At ten days old the young ones
had cast their skins and were beginning
to eat earth-worms and small slugs. This
is the first time this species has bred in
Europe.
Soldiers of the Shall.
The Persian soldier, even on state oc-
ensions, presents generally a rather ludi
crous appear.ir.ee, says St. James’ Ga¬
zette.’ His uniform is of cotton cloth,
ami mostly of a deep b.’ue color. It is
made of what we call sh rting, and when
new is very suitable clothing in a warm
country. But soon the military buttons
begin to disappear and are replaced by
substitutes of nil sorts, shapes, colors
and sizes. The liair disappears from tho
warrior’s sheepskin shako, which quickly
grows shabby on account of his habit¬
ually using it as a pillow. Moreover,
the foot coverings of no two men in tire
regiment are alike, and the whole crew
presents a melancholy appearance.
But yet tlie Persian soldier does the
best he cun. Previous to a review or
festal parade he may he seen carefully pre¬
paring a plume of white feathers, pro¬
cured from the nearest domestic fowl,
and biuding them to a piece of stick.
When tliis martial plume has attained
the size of a lamp brush lie triumphantly
affixes it to a shako. On the occasion of
official ilhimin ations composite
candles arc* served out by the local gov¬
ernor at the rate of one to each man.
Tlie colonel lias, of-course, a greater num¬
ber of men on his list than ever make an
appearance; he keeps the difference.
The other officers appropriate half the
remaining candles. The non-cotnms-
ioned officers eat (i. e., steal) a certain
proportion ; and at length one candle is
.served out to every five men. This is
divided into five portions, a new wick is
inserted; and, when the regiment is
paraded, at a given signal a box of
matches is passed round, anil the t’egi-
ment triumphantly presents arms with a
lighted candle in each man’s musket as
per general order.
The pay of the Persian soldier is
-immiliaLly seven tomans if'2 15 ) per
him till it has passed through the hands
o f »‘»»y persons, his superiors. But his
rations of three and a half pounds of
bread a day are quite another matter.
Jf bis rations are tampered with the sol¬
dier mutinies at once, and tlure is no
.‘[^7 . , .. , ,
"f i' P '' rS,a " 8 ° Ulier>
ra,,onR ‘ w in “P»We.
I'cai’i-I'ed Swine.
Tlie re is a genuine easn oi pea,.; i Je
.
fore swine at Merced, Cal. At that
point the San Joaquin river i, very low,
and .n many places the river bed and
tho bottom of the large sloughs are
covered with fresh water mussels. Pearls
of fair color are sometimes found in
these bivalves. At present droves of
hogs are eating the mussels, pearls and
a!!. Tiie pork of tho pearl-fed swine is
not at all palatable.
Good Reason f ir Confidence.
Young Imlv—“1 am convinced that
Algernon loves rue.”
"■
“1 have noticed that lately he keeps
his eyes constantly fixed on the parlor
.....
Flossj "s Preference,
Proud father (who has just been pre-
seated with a son),- Flossy, little
daughter, which would you like best to
have, a little sister or a little brother ?
Flossy (meditatively)—Well, papa, it
d's just the same to you, 1 think I’d
rather have a little white rabbit.—[Har-
pet ’s Bazaar.
Tlio Tricky Merchant.
Iggiigjgl
iog that he had always considered die
merchant to be upright and honorable.
^ 'now wlietherT'am [Ziliod in j
C all,ng the .ner. hant di-honest, but I
l>ase my »usj>ici nn on tneno sending facts: I |
have been in the h.dutol my
: Office boy to Ins place have to needed, buy certain and j
, ma \i articles that i 1
have noticed that very ofteu he sells to j
this child imperfect articles, and gives
him for change mutilated currency or
Canadian money, which he knows per-
fectly well older persons would not take, i
as they are not acceptable in merchant current
transactions. 1 think that a
who will take advantage of a child m
this wav would take advantage of nu
do v>“» business 1 / >» •»«. with such ■»'• persons F'fr .”—Albany »<>;«»
Journal .
Wrong Color;
V few dav* ago a very handsome svo-
man entered a dry goods house in New
York aud inquired for threw a bow. himself back
The polite clerk
and remarked that he was at her service.
“Yes, but I want a buff, not a green
one,” u;is the reply.
The voting man went on measuring
goods immediately.
ovciule ItaO, Thomas Torney, S o-.t 1 >*--
, bed with
1 m, I utn >m t’o , \V. Vh„ wrote: "In
sciatica, am usine St. Jact bsOil-” Oct.->(l»,
: so. he v\ rites: “Throe rubbinKS uith it jp t me
- t ai d < u:ed me. Norctur .’’
of ,
Etuployei- “You never complained Imd your l
before. In fact, you never any j
C.IUM* fi>r comp 1 Hint. 1 have a ways pant von
-U-c ha - used lied Star Cough Cure,’’
""■ *...... .. . . ..............
ti wn, MU., for the iure of coughs, oppression
of the chest ant ute thro it." Price twenty-
five cents u b ttle.
‘‘There's a j^reat ileal of talk,” obsevvos Mr.
Jeam<*fl “About Yt*!lovvp!««h, d masters.’ in his unpublished Now, why, jour- iu
ua!, the ‘o
tho mime somebody of goodness, tell and about common the old sense,
don't m ser¬
vants.
The Weak v
a ,.
to the syateiu. .Sold by druggists.
" pT ””
have“ost%U r,. fear^ortk- . b , °
have lost all fear to til- -~0|W »
The best cough medicine Is Peso's Cure for
Consumption. Sold everywhere.
One good mother is worth a hundred school
masters ,—George Jlnlurt.
ELY’S
CREAM BALM M *
j I have used tvx> bot- \ 1 [Rcl^SgES^
I lies of Ely's Cream ^ \
| Halm awl consider ,y. f1t ADd
fereel myself 20 cured. I from suf- f ft? HAYFEVtft ^ J^ij:
years fijjgxi
catarrh and catarrh- ^ tsd^lB
at headache and this
is the first remedy if”? \
that afforded tasting BBS ,e.' Fx^Vo^ - ,.q ’
relief.-..]). I dike T.Uijyin- Street. L 5.A.
son, 14o HAY-FEVER ~
Chicago, [It.
A partif’l^ P> ice is applied by into cfifth nos tril and is
t-o use. 50 BROTHERS, ets. mail nr at (1 pgists. Send for
circular. PLY Ding sts. Owego, N.Y.
j POROulftAiTER ©(CAPC 1 NEJ 0 j
;
Highest Awards of Hednls In Kurope and America.
The neatest, quickest, for safest an l most powerful
remedy known Rheumatism, i'leurlsy, Neuralgia,
and Lumbago, all aches Backache. Weakness, cold In the chest
ami pains. Endorsed by S. 0<«0 Ph
clans and Druggists of tho highest repute. Bensc
Plasters promptly relieve and cure where ot
plasters and greasy salves, linlimnts and lotions,
ar - 1 absolut *!y useless. Beware of imitations under
Him )ar sounding names, soeb as “Capsicum,” *Oap
u<'ln. ,# “Capslclne.” as they are utterly worthless
and Intended to deceive, ask for Benson’s and
TAKE VX-THKRS. All druggist*.
! HtiABURY & .JOHNSON’ Proprietors. New Yorfe.
) DR. KILMER’S One of every five we
meet has sorao form of
Heart Disease, and is i n con¬
stant danger of Apoplexy,
,td Shock or sadden I )eath i
This liouialy rcguJates, re¬
lieves, corrects ana cures.
fSTPrepared nt Dr. Kilmer’s
PhiceN * 6 for. dispensary. letters of inquiry Jllnphamton, answered. N. Y.
$l.°° ‘ Guide to IIealtlU Bent Free L
$5. Sold by Druggists,
Don’t Buy Until you
find outthe new
iPW m Improve- ments.
£ &
j
; the
Save
middleman’s
PROFITS.
:wr < ■'. \ i- >;t catag »; f n
J. P. Stevens & Bro
“ ‘ ant Ca.
f,
j \ SAW WORKS.
Saws «*&Buftotur*m of and Deiiler* m
and Saw-Mil] Supplies.
IL’MtlrtiiK a Specialty.
Agents for L. Powi* * Company’s
W ««il H tirklfn >1 acbint^ry.
l'*i*e and complete atock. Wnta
forcAWofti*. Atlanta. Ga.
A OFNTS^ WANTED : ^-"t'toVsVi'e^lV
*■ Marvelous Wonders.?/,-Whole World”
WHETMtR filU NT &
PIANO&ORGAN
if will pay you to write to
PHILi fR S ,& CREW,
tor Catalogu e (free) and Prices. Mention tlxi»
paper.
igmuiji PILES ItfajBW&t
fi U< D Iuiil I II M W?"*”''' iirwZZZiftk
orr,c «
, BUSINESS
h»ol.m Hi .Ml^l r .‘‘''» ’ V ,‘*<*'.'« : »• ° HINESS l tbe b< "“
? f 1 s..
U-SV, JJa:
SI5.S2®8&&8$gi33!
Herod Rntlier than Solomon.
f:! S
lin ’J s 1 * 8 ’,, " K ,'Revolver’’ 1(11
° ’
______
««•«••I>»*blHtytoMnlur'nl i..rertio«.
a „ P d e ~S!‘« T\Z heaC
(a ,. ka n f nmlariai disease. The most trifling
exposure may, under such conditions. Infect a
te , m w i,icti. If healthy, would re 1st the mt-
a m , t icu nt. Thseuly way to secure immu-
n it y from malaria In localities where It is
pvoi a lent, Is ti tone and regnlate , the tm&tus system
“heb'SodlamUhhga'vh!S?s biu«r\ These resitts ,me are accom- to
SSE?*?.'.."
proved to if the m si nod^kjadred in abl- safeguard disorders,
against fever »n4 nKU«
J? r 7 i’”, B moiwrer,' < a m u^-cdo:.t'h'lvUcorant of
tin- i»^«T«5t»!kassi.*® organs of urination,and an active depur-
, m : n!8 .
An Interstate telegrsph bill t» tho next thins
promised by consn-ss. Lord, how much this
world is governed!
“Over end Over Again,
j take notice that Dr, Pierce's “Pleasant Puraa.
j ifr®<‘‘vein sick
1 anil nwV oas heailaeh--. constipation, ituti(op¬
tion, rush of Wood to the head, cold extremi-
1 tics, and a 1 ailments aristn : from < bst ruction
of the bodily functions. Their action is thor-
I ©ugh yet gentle,and tie ingmUau ta being with. e->-
tirclv vegetable, they f an be taken im¬
punity in o the mo-t delicate stomach. All
d ruggists.___
Nothin!; will dissipate true love more quick¬
ly than tho smell oriioiling cabbage.
ChronicCoiiglwand Col«l«.
And nil diseases of the Throat and Lungs, can
bo cured by the use of Scott’s Emulsion, as it
contains the healin' virtues of Cod Liver Oil
and Hypophosphites in th -ir fullest form. Isa
Vmulsinn nalatab 1 © os milk.
snusfwr ssmzjxii
berculous and Strumous Affections, to say
Tim best weather for haymaking-When
it rains pi tchtorks.
When everything else fails. Dr. Safe’s Ca¬
tarrh Remedy cures.
Remember your honor, which raises you
above fortune andabove kings.
If you have numbness in arms and limbs,heart
ss&fa ssasar"""* 8 » 5 .*s£s.*& - *"-**”* sar
_________- _
THOSE in want of payintj headed employmeut,
?1 " ,ul11 rea<1 the ».iverti.mcit “Agents
wanted” in another column.
Afterspeeoh, alienee is the greatest power
in the world.— LMOrt\nirr.
Daughters, Wives and Mothers.
Send for Pamphloton t'em lie Diseases, free,
securely Realed. Dr. J. li. Marelnsi, Utica, N.Y
it afflic ted with soixeyes use Dr. Isaac Thomn-
son’sEye-water. Druggists set 1 at 2V per bottle
SOLID FACTS!
‘Seven Springs” Iron-Alum Mass* will giva you
nppet ite, strengthen purify you up, tha cure blood, Dyspepsia, Diarrhoea "the Kill-
and all Headaches, Catarrh ware! off malaria. act on Price,
neys, relieve and 50c.
and $ 1.00 pdtf bottle.
Dickey’s Painless Eyewater Sd”«y?V?;
once. No cure,no pay. Aha lor it. r>-• d by Druggists
or sent l>KKSON, by mail postpaid. Manufacturers, Price '!■>: Bristol, . I> I C Tens. ’ Jv K \ iV
AN
TTIlil’.tt’ I.MPltilVEIJ ItOtT IS ILK PACK-
XX AUK'S, ‘iair. Makes bevarage, 7t gallons sfr«ngthen» oi a and delicious, puri
sparkling hen the blood. temperance Its purity and delicacy of flavor com¬
mend it to all. S tld every tv here. T It \ i T.
SHY KJKNTS \VANTKI>t*»»eH on nr Lvominou-
*^5* » sen 40 Bi.stl and U nubinati'ni Skirt Bustle
__and Supporbn'. He nd $ 1.00 for samples and agency.
Address, with stamp, H. A. French A Co., Atlanta, G&.
Pensions S tO So!die rs & Heirs. Bend stamp
sm i! r». COT.. I.. KINd-
A . t*y. Washington, D. C.
rAiis.
Best Cough Syrup. Thsi * >• »<>o. Use
In time. Soid by drnjigists. •
Jt -
v5) £:' :mfifi —;.~_ «“ I
‘
A N. II............. .....TfiirUHii/S?
'
L!ver Disease Mrs. Mary A. McClitre, Columbus, Kans., 1S84,
writes: “ I addressed you in Novemner, with
in regard to my health, being afflicted
m liver disease, heart trouble, and female weak¬
Heart ness. I was advised to use Dr. Pierce’s
Trouble. scription Golden Medical and Pellets. Discovery, I used Favorite one bottle Pre¬
of the * Prescription,’ five of the * Discov¬
ery,’aud four of the ‘ Pleasant Purgative Pellets.' My health be¬
gan to improve under the use of your medicine, and my work strength hard
came back. My difficulties have ail disappeared. 1 can
all day,orwalk four or live miies a day, and stand it w ell; and when
I began using tho medicine I could scarcely walk across the room,
most of the time, and I did not think I could ever feel well again.
I have a little baby girl eight months old. Although she is a little
delicate in size and appearance, she is healthy. I give your reme¬
dies all the credit for curing me, as I took no other treat ment alter
beginning their use. I am veny grateful for j ; our kindness, and
thank God and thank you that I am as well as I am after years
of suffering.” Mrs. I. V. Webber, of Yorkshire, Cattaraugus Co.,
Liter N. Y„ writes: ‘*-1 wish to say a few words in pro iso
of your ‘Gi'ld.-n Medical Discovery’ and ‘Pleasant
Disease. Purgative Pellets.’ For five years previous to
taking them I was a great sufferer; I had a
severe pain in my right work. side I continually: happy to was
unable to do my own am say
I am now well und strong, thanks to your medicines.’’
Chronic Diarrhea Cured.—D. Lazakke, Esq., fffi and !77
lkcatur Strut, New Orleans , La., writes: "I used Hire fee bottles of
the ‘Golden Medical Discovery,’ and it has cured me of chronic
diarrhea. My bowels art? now regular.”
“ THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.”
Thoroughly cleanse the Mood, which is the fountain of health, bv using Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, and
digestion, a fair skin, buoynnt spirits, and bodily health and vigor will be established. worst scrotum, . u r blm«l-
Golden Medical Discovery cures all humors, from ttie common pimple, blotch, or eruption, to the Sow
poison. Especially has it proven its efficacy in curieg Sait-rhcum or Tetter, Fever-sores, Jlip-joiut Disease, hcronu"
<i and Ulcers.
^ipipisSi ™ irnsraw. 11 —I . ___ hi in f?,T- bVi'l 0 "'] > and” ),i ®7 l l |i?no«Miolinrt '' ,>r y as directed by
tlmslbejsn to feel like a ru-iv ne
The‘Pleasant Purgative iiian iwmortwIlS A?/* weU
sick headache,or tiglitni Pellets'ure the best t I C hmWoi^ I^1 ,U8 .? ,, ’
Baftett «i ubout tin- , | 1 ,st an d ^
■),. ... » quite a im ^ M mtaiUffiSf t-
HIP-JOINT Um L.,.. Mrs. Ida M. Strong, of Ainxwnrth withfili^A^mr
Htt.l<- t><>y bad lie™ trom,l<d
UlSFl^F _ disease t a- two ‘floldeli vems Wlien bo nlF.-Z'L
UlotSot. 1180 " r your Mediinl ills liim lied°nn l fTer>n'i"!
r—:-net ‘i*ellets, h<- ivhm eontincd to C °iV,,V
— 7 thanks be moved without suffering fa^up grout alf n»in
now, to your ‘ Discovery,’ he is able to the’
CONSUMPTION, WEAK LUNGS, SPITTING OF BLOOD-
wonderful blood-purifying, ^
2 and nd PurlH's* purities dlscasi's!”^ th the e'bl'ooVb’ blood. ** 18 a K remedy. 'While While it it promptly ^mpt.^e^tto cures the S& severe. Tou^it
"wasting UP the Sy8tPm ’ ,u '' 1 incr « a8e » tho flesh and weight of those standard of
reduced below the usual
Oat., writ ™: 1 •'yop wiVl*ever be pmlsed’lwme for ^T rOWgmi L l1 '
i^I^JZ went to the best doctor t in these parts! fie toldniotbntmoB "“
n u(aIt e ln y !iM (! a 0 1<1 g°b V ndert ^ ke
FfTTmin m e. fle 8 i mtoht nnfv fhuTn. t ;V.l U v er P'. 1 ,f
I IlIVtN UP I ha -d. ns that was the p" 4 *r^^eonsum^^ _ . ,
I I far Wy have any curative r o ltveroVi tio i so V
I TO n,r DIE I ad van.....I. I tried the Cod ]! ,<•“? » R i,
treat ment, but I was so weak not°t™ r ™ h
T on my stomach. Mv tlidljgh husband hadt!! ,W Sllal
to give- mo up vet, eoiaulafnt he 7mw„L.!ef l
everything lie saw advertised f’or my ° r 1I1P
of years, anTnow f^l min-lf ?^ 7 nr th fh r \ 0 e T^ t , , , Sm for ? ”"™ h or
faring and he restored to bentth at once. Any peraon who is
: ! ; n Joubt, nonfl but write mo, inclosing: a stamped sHt-
* «« statement wifi
«Bffi A Q3B. Valiev, Modi-
Bolden Medical Discovery is Sold by Druggists. Price <11.00 per Bottle, Six Bottles for $5.00.
or
WORLD'S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Proprietors,
No, 663 Main Street, BtIFF*l°'
n
unions i
~ jS7 2 # \ J J t
\ ■; —■ 3 \n
M® *1
A ♦
tVi a.
tr a JSZfiSst ^ 9
, ■
'S' r. lx.••••
\\ MjAftSA HA
\ I 1 i
mfffp v A ...... i:»
M’
p.::
;
^ 7 wi. -M
%
W!
S3
m 7
m
The Oft Told Story
SitTU-. J*
tie combination, prop rtlon^^aud P' p l“ r ** n " .. |
SBK= !
fail. Peculiar Iu the uneqUaied noml name It has
made at home, which is a • t twer of strength
abroad.” leeultar in the phenomenal aalesWhaaat
ta ,e | the meet popular v p anti su.-s-Mful spring m»l
' public to-day is
icine ami blood purifier before the
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
• r have had running sores on my limbs for five
, »»b ut
vearg go bad at times that I could not 5 \alk
■*•>“ ss’.’sasr-s.'si'srii'r 'T'xrrr-sr.ssT ■
m.nDi>f»titean l felt away. But Hood's Sarsaparilla
did wonderful amount of good. 1 ani well
me a 1 have
^.altlte, towliat , wa8 when I Iswan to use it. a
have gained In flcsli, an 1 can sleep
' d, t 1 can do
well tty sores are almost all heal an
a good day'a work, out not hr.-ak down.-'-Mas.
C. F. Lord, Dover, N. H
N, B.-Be sure to get the Peculiar Medicine,
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
| , Boh'hj L C. L HOOD all dntu^ & ctl CO., , s ^ 8 ’ Apothecaries. , Lowell. owelf Mast, Mass.
lOO Doses One Dollar
and
Interesting Illustrated Price List oi uuproved
HIVES, and everyth jng: needs t in Prolitnbfe !l«e
Cull hit, FItElh Nothing Pnleuied.
J. W?. JENKINS,
WETIMPlvA, ALABAMA.
SHOW cases. waltcaSES.
—■i==st=p*i
DESKS. OFFICE FURNITURE AND FIXTURES.
TERRI uk SI r for tIO »—— !U .....:
TO A MONTH can '.)C nio4«
ni h their own horses an 1 give their b«* whole i.r.>mably time to
theliuslnens. ripaie moments may eni-
ployed alto. A few t»' ncies In towns and oitlos.
B. F. JOHNSON A »:€>., 1013 Main St., Richmond, I a.
™ Mrs. Parhelia Hkt-ndaoe, of 161 Lnfk StrA
HFMFRIS Lockport. .V. J . writes: “ 1 wan troubled wit#
utncimi. I'liills, nervous an'i general debility, with tniquent
fiCDti 1TV sore throat, and my mouth was badly oaMereo.
ULDiUli. My liver was inactive, itud 1 suffered much from
dyspepsia. 1 am pi- used to say that your ‘UoM
Medical Discovery' and * Pellets' hue cured me of ml these
ailments aud 1 cannot say enough in their praise. I must also
say a word in reference to your ‘ Favorite Prescription, feimuea. a
has proven itself a most excellent medicine for weak
It has been used in my family with excellent results.'
Dyspepsia.—T ames li. Colby, Ksq., of Yuratan, Houston (k
' Minn., writes: “ I was troubled with indigestion, and would®
heartily and grow poor at the same time. 1 experienced neartnuro.
sour stomach, and many other disagreeable I commenced aympfop'S takuw eonmajj >' -.
mhmmm io 1 but disorder. Discovery’ and ’Pellrta. m
i„„.‘Golden HVlGOfl&TES Alt .Ileal dyspepM-Mj
m 7 I am now entirely free from the tiave.^'™
am, in fact, healthier than i and www
TIIF I nt wlo Sy^TFII I Cm. five years, and one-half i weigh pounds, oue hundred and bavedow*
one l
much work the pant summer I as never too
done in tho same length of time in my life.
medicine that seemed to tone up the muscles and ,{* 11 TTT
the whole system equal to your ‘Discovery’ and ’lcliers.
Dyspepsia. -TtiEBESA A. Pass, of complaint, SprinuMi'h dyspepsia-
“1 was troubled one year with liver cured®-'
sleeplessness, but your ‘ Golden Medical Discovery irt-S-J?
Chills and Fever.-Rev. If. K. Moslev, Montmnre’ unu
writes: ‘‘bast August I thought I would die with chills .,
] took your ’ Discovery ’ and It stopped them in avery suon
and can walk with the help of crutches. He does not
pain and can eat, .mdrtiy.M rnAWjJ
Lcannot find words witli which to express my gratitude tori
beuetit he has received through you.” '
l ^ 111,1 skin DtHcnMC.— The “Democrat and Kl
A TFBRIRIF ItnlllBLt 1 " ml,rill ue. Mary,and, says: "M>*- of
™ Ann Poole, wife of Leonard Poole, .
iiaay- Irri invinu luumtmry, Dorchester Co., Sid., has
^...tbe.wgTfbC'KJSr’S.UIrSSS't," - »*«!f
™-
attacked the elbows and became so severe as to prostrate tvo'* '
b y sev,.ral physicians for a year or
m emnmem id the use of the medicine named above. Sue ■ |
Ja.'fan bi puaid und is ivrll i.ixj hearty. Mr«. Pool® 1 ^“ , l
the m^lrtne ha|saved now tkys^ uj
J d- Avbfs, of East her New life and Market, prolonged Dorchester her Countil,#
'
' ° VC fllt ' ,S ' '
I m/thnfSTF’ l,n8curf ' ,, niy <ln 1 | F , 1 t rr oT a very had *.......
f .
ty ' Mr ’ Downs continues:
Consumption ami Heart Disease.-”I also taWgjfc vkh®
1hauk you for the remarkable cure you have effected
H," I WlQTFn Tfl 1 hie disease, Sf"* ycu consumption, '" 8 1 ' llld and heart
( "fluI tU TO Before consultinfr you I had wasted «»«-
1/1 Cvri SKELETON rvnu n skeleton : could not slei-’i norivst and j
1 *» tim,,s "•i'-bed to dio to be out of wy
,ll( ‘n consulted you, find you time. ■
cannot now recite how, step bv sb-p. the signs and
Bleeding writes: Joseph “My F. wife McFarland, had frequent E^'tidainTfe’® Weeana „r
commenced a v0 „ot
Lungs. the lungs before sho
from had ‘ Golden any since Medical its use. Discovery. For some - ,„00 ^
She has been feeling sd well taai
discontinued
i'r^tlVbe 2 Iloml-sSurwiii'a =t«ss
applied only fo
sr conient., Vou vrlll ilnf
home and measur its l„,
boht 1W t^ft«poonfuls. .Now real the nirectiow
and you will find that t c averse dose for different
age* la . lea. than a resales,aful. . , , T Tha. , ratoe,
and strength are peculiar to Hoorl’s sarsaparilla.
Is the Best
*1 commenced taking Hood's Sarsaparilla as an
experiment, as 1 h^d no appetite or strength, and
ssnsasr. k?,m:
l tit as foon —rrirrYTSTr as I had taken ha.f abott.e o-Hood r?
sarsaparilla Stomach felt better m> app Ibavetakc:. «t " as 1,f, ,h ‘ "* *' brtte j- An, l ‘H
stoma, h never felt belle,.’ -Mas. J. F. Dd
brack, Pas oag. R- t. •o.ttnol
-We all like Ho A’a Sarsaparm tth
eninJ-izziB B v,."oi s. Auburn, R. I.
no not be induced to take any other. Get
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
rold by all druggists. Sr;8lifor|5. Prepamioai;
I vf. I. HOOD A CO.. Apothecaries, I/)well.M«i
lOO Doses One Dollar
2938 & SWJK FARM WAGONSsH^r
Thu cheapest Spreader out and tl
'Ll only kind thatcanbei
_ ^—- vrxcCTii. to oid wagaa
!
r 4(38® WeTirk ii&M
_ L4 SiugmIowa, Col mob M»rjUi to. Ohl
Kusicru llracrb Slov.*c,
^
i
►sm ieviUelV#, W. fee Mcr«rmirk Write for 21 circulars years' X Hon,WasblBftotJj practice. and new Hucoefflj lawi.j
| $5 SISSSS
1
----- 13
UATENTSS !^*
-, i’atcnt »-A'v.ver. U sshhigfon. <’•
*
i ft Ur HJ III tl Habit Cured. TraWtt«m« LsFajfUA' Mtwj
UiMi.'.B Ukmkdv Co.,