Newspaper Page Text
■
ge
gher
y will
desirable
j tower c.\-
.a iv>i fc tlie wind when
quarter*, will come whirling
around the building to the risk of dam¬
age to tlie wheel. Many dig the large
stork well, over which the mill is reared,
in front of tlie barn, and with iron pipes
conduct the water underground, after it
has been pumped, to tlie vats in the dif¬
ferent yards where the cuttle are kept.
’Ibis plan gives tho cattle purer water to
drink than if the well were sunk iu the
yard <.
One of tin* greatest inconveniences at¬
tending the use of windmills are the ice
storms which occasionally occur.
The ice adheres to the fans in the
wheel, obstructing the working of it,
and nothing can be done to remove it,
but wait until it thaws, which is usually
but a few hours.
The wheel at intervals needs oiling,
and it needs a cool head to mount the
ladder, frame, which is always a part of the
and oil tho works.
tsometiines a gale will strike the wheel,
which is usually about ten feet across,
with such force that it falls to tho ground
ami is demolished, when it must be re¬
placed the higher by tho a new one. It is found that
tower on which the wheel
rests, the less it is likely to lie Injured
by lugli winds, as a ga!e expends its
force for mischief nearer the earth than
is supposed.
Windmills wear much faster on ae-
count of the wind power which ruus
them.
Some famil es desire to make the
cannot *be inade'of's'iiiOi illiif
and mnilitv tmiul' ms i,« wlier ./welt ■ ail i \u> .I . flir!** \\
me at i/' ,1 * * * * * M
’
£ Xtatrs iuctorv di \everthel as “t v g I," . ctt,c ’ R
best rennetmust in* used and nrnnrr I
attention be paid to the temperature mauufne-1 of
the milk during the pro css of
luring. The rennet The fourth stomach
of a calf, before it has oaten ”rass) should i
be at least six months old—ouc year is
better—and must have been kept per
fcctly dry. Put a good sound rennet in
n gallon crock containing three quarts of
warm handful water, a teacup full of salt, and if
a of sage leaves arc added it Will
give a delicate sage flavor to tlie cheese,
Soak three days, or until a teaspoonful of
the rennet extract stirred in a teacupful |
of milk will curdle it in fifteen minuter. >
The strength is then right. Then take
out the rennet, dry again thoroughly,
and uwill then do to soak again with a
fresh rennet. Strain off the liquid ex
tract into bottles, tightly corked, and
1 o make whole inilk cheese, strain
the milk in a clean tin boiler, setting it
on the range, where it will remain at
nounds t’liitv oiiav si .i^ 7 1
'
unlit tUm-mirdilv mix-Bfl 'or S ,)i"!i
for twentv miiint c hi *l>v
the curd should be ready for cut ting ”, '
that "i "''i
’
25-T2 nrtv “eoarnte J. from V*. tlm SSi. curtD
stand till the whey rises to the top of
curd, then break the curd in pieces with
the hand, carefully, so as not to start
the white whey, and thus lose some of
the richness of the cheese. When the
euid is met tv well broken da not
Wy gcnt’iv this raise‘tin* omwaUon. buwk up very
temperature by a
gradual heat till the curd is scalded
sufficiently, not over ltd degrees, then
dip into a muslin strainer, laid over a
rack; or spread over a ^ood sized
market bisket, so ns to allow the whey
to drain from the curd. The curd
must be cut line and worked all the time
it is heating, so it will not adhere t*>-
gether. When the whey is drained off,
sall and put curd immediately to pi<*)M.
This pressure shou’d be gradually * in
created.
If one has not sufficient milk to make
to cheese at one setting, tlie curd from
the iir-t lot can be hung and away remain in a cool
place before salting, until
the next batch is ready for scalding:
then it ran be cut fine and added to the
fre-ih c urd when it is being fresliiy scalded, made. and 1 I
treated the same as if It
is much more work to make cheese from ;
tb'a double curd process than from one
! setting, and liable (oa less successful
result.
The curd may be salted at the rate of
ear half an ounce of salt to each pounds, pound, !
y three ounces to six or seven i
salting is not o much for flavoring !
' cheek the tendency to putrefactive I
'ion. Thd saline taste in old cheese |
not so much to the salt used as to j
rmalion of ammoniacal salts in the
of repressing. The pressure on
■ in the press must be regulated
stances up to 1500 to 2000
he cheese is taken from the
I>1 bo bandaged spreading. with cheese The
it from
ttic curing room should
'egrec's. Tlie higher the
■ f|uii:ker the whey ripening,
greasing with but¬
ty reijuirc, to with prevent
lieu of this till¬
er the cheese becomes
ceasion m iy require,
s requiring and two Stock- or
Field
irtlen Noles,
orn early.
e a lean egg-basket,
ves need good care,
cs succulent inilk. j
tainly lie cleaned I
tho land is half in
t needs no tying to
io oatmeul for grow-
allow cattle and swine
o as \U -of place
.e carpet.
...t is recommended iv-r go i)
with wire-worms,
orchards should be manured and
ed, using lime arid ashes.
,* r ood ashes, where available, are the
cheapest fertilizer for fruit trees.
It is usually necessary to moisten eggs
a little and just dry.” before hatching in nests built
“high
For the first month live times a day is
recommended for feeding young chick¬
ens, by a correspondent of Poultry World.
should Sulphur, used insect freely powder in preventing and kerosene
lie the
spread of and in destroying poultry
vermin.
Currants would give better satisfaction
if not so generally slighted. They repay
very liberally for pruning, manure, and
culture.
Lay in a other stock of copper sulphate and
whatever materials are needed, at l
an early date. And don’t forget the
spraying pump ami nozzle.
On many farms it will pay better to
build a large poultry yard to pen the
chickens in, than to build a much longer
fence to pen the chickens out.
It may be a pleasure for farmers to try
some of the fancy breeds, but the most
profit cornea from kinds adopting and one breeding of the
general purpose it
straight.
Ohl pear trees that have apparently
been worthless have been revived by the
application scattered around of a peck the base. of salt and is ashes
Now the
time to try the method.
In pruning roses rule, cutting back closely
produces, as a fewer blossoms of
closely finer quality, pruned while will be from obtained those not larger so
a
quantity of smaller flowers.
In should planting given peach and rich, quince trees
they be a mellow soil.
Old trees may be materially’benefited if
manure is given over the surface of the
rootS-
f‘’ R ys the New England Farmer: “A
farmer will spend a he day has in carting good some
fertilizer for which to pay a
price, when for the same time spent he
0 h *™ c,lrc 'rirtfr f l | 1| y collecting n the - drop- r""
plngs lrotu ulu er t le r00iitulg fowa '
r!,uit raspbcrrios . . live feet
in rows
n I ial t anil three feet in the row. Black-
berries iu rows eight feet apart and three
f ee t,in the row. Strawberries may be
set ' u rows three feet apart, and* twelve
in°^ es in t' 16 ro1lV - The soil should be
fertile* but good cultivation counts much.
However great possibilities there may
be in poultry raising, the plan adopted
by many farmers causes a loss of far
more fruit, and “garden truck” and
grain, than tlie chickens are worth. In-
tcUigent management and feeding are as
necessary with chickens as with other
live-stock.
No one need expect to get sound,
chickens from eggs laid by hens
have been coddled into good-for- winter
all through the well the
The constitution as as 1
characteristics of a chicken is de- j
by Ilia health find condition or !
patents. j
Speaking of pasturing, opinion n New farmer Eng- j 1
latitler sh\ s: “lu my ft
keen a sheep with every cow with- | j
ut a n L additional expense A farmer
keeping , twenty cows will find he lias ;
j lls t in>R'h food if he has kept twenty i
*t wcl1 ao, ' n ^ \"T: ed ’ ”" J * w • i “*' - j
Wood ashes are one of the , best possi-
ble fertilizers for young trees, whether
fruit or ornamental trees. It should not
bo put directly on the roots, but worked j
into tho soil, as it-ts filled in after the !
tree has beet. act. land plaster might
be used iu the same way, eithei j
Rhine or in connection with the wood
as!u3 - The ashes and planter might also
b ? binadeasted about the trees and
plowed or spaded in.
The best treatment for mange in pigs
is to apply a mixture of flowers of sulphur
and common lard. Apply this ointment
to every part of the animal, rubbing it
into the hair and skin with a good stiff ,
brush, flu* pigs should, of course, be
ueno e<l from the obi pen and placed iu
one will usually perfectly be clean. .sufficient One effect application)
to a cure, j
unless the disease has been neglected
uutil the animal is covered with sores; !
then two or three applications may be
necessary.
Her BEHOLD AFiAlBH.
Vrr*P \ :.|yt
from Any motTi*- A wh will keep tht all
ii i idc of tlj fthell will preserve
eggs for packing lor » ci rut! njjth of time, Egg*
ii. of i»c* more than one
the day laid, anil puck. ! i, ; ij ne weather,
best season being from April to
September. immerse One method of packing is
to them in lime water and set
ally away successful in a cool for cellar, this, weeks, though usu- de-
some often
stroys the eggs by keeping them in too
long. A bettor way js to back them in
salt in a stone jar. Put a layer ot salt
two inches thick in first, and alternate
layers of eggs and salt to till the jar, the
eggs standing on the larger end; a thick
layer of salt should be put on last.
Cover with a stone cover and set in a
cool, dry place.— Detroit Free Fe s.
A New Coverlet.
Cheese-cloth quilts arc the new cover¬
lets, and commend themselves, being
warm and inexpensive. Tito materials
needed ure ten yards of the cheese-c loth
and live one-pound rolls of cotton. The
cheese-cloth when cut into lengths of
two bed and table. a half yards is is placed on layci a
or Over this laid a
of been cotton placed batting, which ha u previously register,
before a hot lire or
unrolling it from the bundle over a chair
or clothes-horse. This causes the cotton
A to expand to twice its first thickness. and
second layer goes crosswise, so on
until all the cotton has been .utilized.
Over the last layer is placed the second
cover of cheese-cloth, and the whole tied
feather with worsted, in bedquilt fashion. edge.— A
Commercial stitching Advertiser. completes the
Teach tho Girls to Sow.
Who can say that tho inventions of the
nineteenth century do not show us to be
tion? going ahead, only pushing is this onward the r#>cfa to perfec¬ scien¬
Not
tific matters, but in all branches pertain¬
ing to household work, lu ground. one paiticu-
lar, however, we are taught losing of Oui tlie
daughters are not grandmothers the use in the
needle, as were our ago,” for did
good old times of “long
they not fashion dainty, beautiful gar
m carts, without the aid of the sewing
mac feme, with its numerous attachments,
hemmer, binder? rufiier, tucker, corder and
hemmed, In “grandma’s rolled, whipped day” every and ruffe sewed was
on
by band. In undergarments every seam
was neatly felled, every yard of flannel
was (after “catstepped,” being run together) nicely and
evenly and without this
pretty finish was considered a bungling,
unsightly piece of work.
In many cases too much time and-eye
sight were spent in beautifying and
adorning ladies’ underwear. Particu¬
larly was this tlie case when days, weeks
and even months were spent in elabo¬
rately nightgown embroidering the chemise and
yokes so much iu vogue
twenty and thirty years ago. This I
consider a wanton waste of time, and
now that Hamburg embroidery and
woven trimmings are so it. cheap and pretty
there is no excuse for
Neither do I condemn the use of the
sewing machine, but I contend is that almost to
do good machine work it
necessary for one to understand how to
do plain sewing. I thirdc all mothers
should begin by the of ti^ie their teach daugh- them
tera are ten years van to
tlie rudiments of this branch of house¬
hold work. I am fully aware of the ob¬
jections urged if by most mothers, of time mainly,
want of time, not want on the
part of the mother, want of time on tho
part of the child; many times it is a
want of inclination on tho part of one
or both.
Do not let your child commence too
soon on fancy and decorative work, but
give her a good foundation by a thor¬
ough drill in plain sewing while yet
young enough With to be guided foundation by your in¬
struction. this all
branches of. ornamental work will be
comparatively easy.— Good Housekeeping.
RcclnesP*
RroE Entree. —Stew a cup of ricoun-
til well done, add a small cup of milk,
two well beaten eggs, pepper and salt
to taste, pour into a shallow pan, sprinkle
grated cheese thickly over the top and
u ' «*“«-
Potato Turnovers.— Mix about a
pint of hot mashed potato with one egg,
season to taste, and roll it in flour,
Make it into balls and press or roll it out
thin, put and a tablespoonful half, of meat, fold
minced seasoned, on one
over and press the edges together and
brown on each side in drippings,
Beef Smothered in Tomato.— Cut
an onion fine and fry it slowly in ona
tablespoonful of butter iu a stew pan
Add one pint of tomatoes cooked and
strained, one teaspoonful pound of beef of salt, cooked a little
pepper and one oi
uncooked, cut iu small pieces. Simmer
very slowly until the meat is tender,
Changed Strawberries.— Place a
layer of strawberries pulverized in a deep dish, cover
thickly with sugar; then a
layer of berries, and so on, until all are
used. Pour over them orange juice, in
the of berries; proportion let stand of three for oranges hour to and a quart just
an
before serving sprinkle with pounded ice.
Rice and Asparagus Sour.-Wash
well half a pound of rice and drain, parboil and it
in water, cool in cold water,
then cook it with a quart of beef broth
for twenty minutes; then pour in two
quarts more of beef broth. Put in at the
last moment a pint of small cooked green
-k»*" ‘«i».* «*«•
mto the soup tureen and serve,
Escalloped Tomato.— One quart to-
matoes, add one teaspoonful salt, one
saltspoonful pepper, a few drops of
onion juice and one sprinkle tablespoonfulsugar: with crumbs,
butter a dish and
pour in the tomatoes; cover with one
C up cracker crumbs moistened with
butter. Bake until brown. Fresh
canned tomatoes may be used for the
above. Use plain crumbs.
Cimx y Sorr.—Tlie materials needed
for this soup are one quart of rich brown
stock, one pint of carrot, one teaspoon-
ful of sugar, one teaspoonful small of onion salt,
little pepper and one
sliced. Wash and scrape the carrot.
Shave off in thin slices a pint of the
outer part, Lo not use the yellow onion
centre. Cook the carrot with the
in boiling salted water until tender.
Rub the carrot through a colander, add
the stock and heat again. Add the
sugar, salt aud pepper, and when hot
serve immediately with croutons.
worm SOT live rMWHH
I
Captivity of .
A Had Story of the a
Colony of Prairie Dogs.
_
•‘When T I was a little boy my father
moved from Hoos.erdom over upon a
broad and blooming prairie in I now, ,
stud a mau to a reporter of a Chicago pa- i
per. tho “That could prairie, reach stretching to the north as fur and as j j
eye vast garden of flowers and I
west, was one November. There
plants from April to hundred varieties of
must have beau a
wild, blooming plants, ranging from the
lowly strawberry, with its w hite blossom,
to the gaudy, flamboyant wild marigold, color
whose oriental splendors gave vivid
to miles and miles of undulating prairie, in
“Hut this by the way. 1 started to
speak , tho .; prairie - . . clogs, i ilio tlowers a
or
were scared y more numerous than they,
You might Vide for miles along a path
flanked on either side by their Milages,
which wore seldom more than a few rods
apart. These villages,always on some lit-
tie knoll or hill, were populous. I he
horseman who approaoned one of them
would see a sentinel gravely motionless
at the door of every burrow. One could
scarcely tell these sentries from bits of
wood, so still and straight were they, land- so
mu oh a part of the great, silent
Soap©. there of ‘now
“But it ever was a case
you see it and now you don t, those little
sentinel prairie dogs offer the traveler a
striking example. He sees them there,
as silent and impressive as the-sentries
of Pompeii, and wonders what they will
do when he gets closer, lie keeps his
eye fixed on two or three of them, and
vmnra»inn«lv unconciousiy ohordra checks ms his horse, linrsn Bn so that, mat
tile clatter of hoofs may not startle
them. He is within fifty, thirty, twenty
paces, when lo! the sentries are gone.
He has not seen them go. The earth
has swallowed them. He rubs his eyes
and he rrdes on, wondering if it were
all an illusion. He looks back to assure
himself, when lo! the sentries are there
as still and statuesque as before.
“One time my father trapped four or
five of them. I don’t know how he man¬
aged it; I’ve forgotten that. I think
they must have been young and foolish,
like baby rats, which venture where
their pa and ma would never go. chil¬ My
father brought them home, and we
dren hugged ourselves in delight as we
fancied them as pretty pets like squir¬
rels or white rabbits. A cage was placed quick¬ in
ly fitted up; the captives were
it and surrounded by all the dainties
which we fancied could tempt them to
forget their captivity. Our parents kept
us away from the cage, as the little
strangers regarded us with a terror
which they did not attempt to conceal.
But we went to place more food before
them the next morning. The food pre¬
viously provided had not been touched.
The little prisoners sat wearily on their
haunches in the dark extremity of their
cell. Childish curiosity was repressed
till the oeeond morning, when the cage
was again visited. The captives sat in
the same position, and no morsel of the
varied bill of fare with which we had
designed to tempt them had been touch¬
ed. The water was undiminished in the
bowl. Another day passed, the third
morning came, and we ran out to see our
pets. The sight that met our eyes I
shall never forget. In their hunger and
despair the poor captives had eaten their
own feet, iho bloody stumps were a
sad and sickening reproof to oar cruelty
in depriving the children of the prairie
of their wild, sweet liberty. We felt it,
children as we were, and silently, almost and
in tears, ’ we opened * the prison 1 door
,, _ . . .
Slipped away to give the captives Oppor- lute.
timity to escape. But it was too
With their little feet gnawed off up al-
Tiost to their little bodies, ’ they could I 1
reely i than themselves , i N out ,
more ur&££
to the grass, where they soon after
x/1 o
*
Don’t disgust cvc ybody by hawking, blow-
g and spii ting, but use Dr. Sage’s Catarrh
■medj and be cured.
Durham, N. C.. is to have September. a tobacco expos!
a and railroad jubilee in
• .afflicted with i-ore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp-
rC i’s Eye-water. Druggists sell a I 2.1c. per bottle
mm sm sii
has been before the and public in
now about ten years,
that time lias proved itself
to lie all that it has been
represented.
It is purely vegetable, harmful,
2 contains nothing
and DOES purify the
blood and CCRK dis¬
ea s e as if puts the Kidneys, 1
the only blood purifying- health.
org-aus, in complete
3 It Cures Permanently.
We have tens of thousands of
testimonials to this effect
from people who were cured
years ago and who are
well to-day.
It is a Scientific Spe¬
cific, was not thoroughly put upon
the market until
tested, and has the endorse¬
ment of Prof. S. A. Lattimore,
M- A., Ph., LL. D., Official
Analyst of foods and medi¬
cines, N. Y. State Board of
Health, and scores of emi¬
nent professional chemists, experts. physicians
and
H. H. Warner <fc Co., do
HO t cure everything
* ro oh**D ottle, tliev hav-
Ulg a specific ., for . each , Itnpor-
j tant disease. Fight shy Ol
au y preparation wllioll claims
j u f a llibility. /
Til® testimonials printed . . by
JJ. H. Warner <b Co. are, so
j fa.rjisthevknow.oositlvely ’ ‘ ‘ tlift five
For nast i ‘
, ,
years they Iiayo had A stanel-
mg ofier of So,0t : 0 for proof
i {jit* contrary. If YOU are
cIp]- aud want to-vetn-ell ** ’
.
I tl®®
' tit ISr A ■ ntlPDIfl Hi fS S-dis ft rr
If ttllliwH f, ty f* VI l Uni &» yD»lfc.t
ra * £££?,;„«.
I have been using Alloock's Porous Pl c 8-
n ns foi 20 years, anil found themnoof tli*
b st of family medicines. Briefl summt gup
my explence, I say that when placed on tho
sm 11 of I he back ALLOOCK’8 PL.t>x*rts fill the
nervous energy, and thus cure
it, and kidney
„„ i\ r women an l chll iron I have
found them tnva uab e. Thoy i ev. r irrit to
the skin or cau-e tho slightest pal ), but cur •
soro throat, cr moy coughs, coals, pains in
side, back or chest, Indigestion and bowel
complaints. C D. Fredericks.
Now York bns a pictorial paper, the lettei
press being in Chinese characters.
A Horse W ln> Can Talk!
Everybody has heard of a "horse laugh,”but
who has ever seen an e mine animal gifted would with the be
P'werof speech? Such an
pronounced a miracle; hut so would the tel •-
graph and tl.e telephone have he naUunhret
years ago. Why, even very recently a cure
to realize that the dis as s ia no t incurable,
l>r. Tierce’s Golden ‘^n^lu’Sg»Wl Medical Discovery will
will no" Healthy when
rmtore diseased ones to a 1S state
8 “"
One-seventh of Ceylon’s revenue comes from
liquor sold to the natives.
“As glares the tiger on his foes. and bows,
Hemmed in by hunters, spears
And, .-re he b unds upon the ring,
itsfangs
upon the human ra< e. Ladies who sutler from
di dressing ailments peculiar to their sex,
and obstinate cases of leucoirh a excessive
"5 eversion,
we k buck, “female weakness,” an
retroversion, tea ring-down sensations,chronic
congestion, in Summation and ulceration of
dm womb, iudummat on, pain and tenderness
in ovaries, accompanied with “internal luw*»"
n r Potter the Epis^-aT year salary. Bishop of
New York, receives $10,«x> a
—-
-—
Long's .Pearl Tooth Soap prevents decay.
lr *’ u - 20c ■ a box *
For The Nervous
The Debilitated
The Aged.
r Medical and scientific still has at last solved the
problem of the long- needed medicine for the ner.
vous* debilitated, and the aged, by combining the
best nerve tonics. Celery and Coca, with other effec.
tivo remedies, which, acting gently but efficiently
on the kidneys, liver and bowels, remove disease,
restore strength and renew vitality. This medicine is
^(.Hine’s V*l£ r Y
fgjtbeiind .
; IFfUlsa place heretofore unoccupied, and marks
a new era in the treatment of nervous troubles.
Overwork, anxiety, disease, lay the foundation ol
nervous prostration and weakness, ar.d experience
has shown that the usual remedies do not mend the
strain and paralysis of the nervous system.
Recommended by professional and business men
Send for circulars.
Price SI.OO. Sold by druggists.
WELLS, RICHARDSON &CO., Proprietors
BURLINGTON, VT.
' T Thii,p](”ii7i ™'ci. 77.ting-casewatch,.. n ■n
j.; for
««;».&"S!Z of equal ,»im.
aw and p-mv sizes with worts ami cases
SSiS^iVS?.^JSfflfrJl kT: eJ “S »™t°hc«°niny bo
JSftS&KSS:.* «*Down tw. wonderful offwposrtbu-? Rea»w«p-w« wont
ono person m each locality to keep m their homes, and show to
those who can, a complete lino of our valuable and very useful
eMe to make this great offer, sending the Solid Uold
Watch and largo lino of valuable samples iUEB, tor tho
reason that the showing of tho samples in any locality, always
a£ two 5
0.5,000 In trade from the surrounding country.'I hose whowrifo
to us at once will receive n great benefit fof'scnrcely any work
and trouble. This, the most remarkable and liberal offer ever
known, is made in order that our valuable Household Samples
may he placed at once where they can he seen, all over Ameri¬
ca*, reader, it will be hardly any trouble for you to show them to
those who may call at your homo, and your reward will be most
eatisfactorv. A postal card, on which to write us, costs but 1
cent, ami if, after you know fill, you do not care to go further,
why no harm is done. Hut if yon «1«> send your address at
once.you can seenro, frbk, an Hi.eoa-nt Solid Gold,
llrx'n no-Case Watch and our large, complete line of valu¬
able Household Samples. We ray nil express freight, etc.
Address, Stinson & Co., Hox Portland, Maine.
Do want
.fe
____
TQfiQilEQ,
r&rans
HEGG'S Improved Circular SAWMILLS
EQUAL S Finnerg n
AND
TO ANY. Matchers. -
EXCELLED fiSfcg&s m 2
BY I
NOME. :
Manufactured by the i f m ).® $
SALEH IRON WORKS, UAL KM, N. C.
Plantation With Self-Contained Engines
► * C;.* RETURN FLUE BOILERS,
i FOR DRIVING
l -i [COTTON f Illustrated Pamphlet GINS and Free. MILLS. Address
JAMES LEFFEL &. CO.
fTftrt-iww ryj f ; SPUING FIELD, OHIO,
or 110 Liberty St., New York,
g^SbotGun Nv.Revo.Vers,
Et:c.
Li- r“4*5^ tor rncc Lift. GunWoriJi.PitUhurgii^Pal?®^
Seines, Tents. Breech-loading double Shotgun Breech-loading at $9.00;
Single barrel Breech-loaders Double-barrel at $4 to $12 ; $5.50
to Hides 320; $1.50 liepoafcmg to $15; Hides, lfi-shooter, Muzzle $141.> |30: loaders Revolvers, at
61 to $'£); Flobert Hides, $3.50 to $H. Guns sent C. O. i>. to
examine. Revolvers WKSTEIkV by mail to any P. O. Address JOH.V-
li’O.V’S tiAEAT (,I V tVOUKS, Piltsburg, Pcnna.
BLOOD POISONING,
(ANCEKS and TV.1IOII 8 positively ( UREO
or no pay. A five-dollar remedy sent on receipt of
fifty cent* to prepay postage. Address THIS
liAUT MI’DIllM, CO.. UmonviHe. Cl.
I>n. Gkbtush’s Vegktadde Canker Specific, Lowell*
Mass., cures all kinds and worst forms of Red or White
rx -rvr W VT! t'i sore woutli, spongy b.eed-
j-vi. 1D g gum- 3 , formation sore tongue and
caused by Cancer Tobacco smoking, Babies prevents iilce it. Mailed, 25c.
growth ot of tongue.
GINSENG AND RAW SOUS
Bonsrht for cash at WAGNER. highest market Prince prices. St.. New Send York. for
circular. OTTO 90
an tn as a day. Samples worth *1.50, FREB
Lines not uder the horsa’s feet. Write
Bre^vsrer nfetv Rein Ho bier Co., Holly, Jlich.
SOLD Live at home anJ make more money working fores than
I at anything else In fhe world. Either sc-x Augusta, Costly Main outfit
Flint. Terms lUilU.’. Address, TllUF. & Co., e,
!
j ** feE lass
PISO S CORE FOR CONgUHPTI P.N
.
If 50, WNW lHt0\VN &: KING
Manufacturers and Dealers in
Cotton, erul \Voolvu Mill Supplies. lll’ld Geu-
\Vrought and Iron l’im- Fittings
’ Brass (-‘omls.
61 5.81:0“) Sn, ATLANTA, GA.
Blood Poison
“I was poisoned by pols<»n tvy, and let it pro till the
poison got Into my blood, when I was obliged to
give up work and was confined to my house for two
months. I had gores and scales on me from head to
feet, my fing r nails came off and my ha r and whis¬
kers came out. I had two pMJfslc'itvii lit did 1 Ot
seem to get much b< Ur. ITo id’s Sar a pari la helped
me so much that I contin ed taking it Mil I hod
used three bottles, when I was cur d, I can re om-
mcn l Hood's Sarsaparilla to all as the best blood
purincr I know of.*’—G eorge W. Vein*, 70 Park
Avenue, Brock port, N. Y.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggist*. $1; six for $:>. Prepared only
byC. *. IlOOD A GO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
___IOO Doses One Dollar
Lecture on i | I '.T r
“ROUGH ON RATS.”
pi'
Jl
rsai
•**<* 2 ^. I M-l-
To clear out lie.I hugs, about mix their iiuyun haunta, u.. m.j and
liroBiJG^rSf's with crease and smear
crevices where grease cannot be applied. I or
Water Bugs, Beetles, Roaches,
&c. For two or three nights
sprinkle Rough on Hats dry, the
powder, in, about and down J
BEETLES all
tho morning wash it away
down the drain pipe, when all
the iusccts from garret to cel lar
will dfcaroear Tne secret is in wherever
1*1 V/A a Ts” I fell D DI! f* O < he fact that
BMsJb insects the are night. in For the
house they must drink during table-
potato Hugs, Insects on well Vines, DflAfyC etc., a
Bpoonfut the powder, and FlUictfnCO 1 ?
shaken in a keg of water,
applied with sprinkling weli pot., spray stirred syringe, 15c., or
whisk broom. $1 Boxes Keep Acr. it size. See full up. direc¬
25c. and — SQUIRRELS,
tions with boxes. CROUfiD Chipmunks,
RABBITS, Sparrows, Rough Gophers, Rats. See directions.
cleared out by on
RSfiSH CM Chills, MALARIA higher than B kite.
Fever onrt Ashie, a
8’ so at Druggists, or prepaM hy Ex. for $1.00.
E. S. Wells, Jersey City, N. J.
WEBER
HAM-FORTES,
ENDORSED BY TIIE LEADING ARTISTS, SEMI¬
NARIANS, AND THE PRESS, AS THE
BEST PSANOS MADE.
Prices as reasonable and terms as easy as consistent
with thorough workmanship.
CATALOGUES MAILED FREE.
Correspondence Solicited.
WARDROOMS,
Fifth Avenue, cor. 16th St., H. Y.
CONFIDENTIAL!
Tlie Confessions of an
Escaped Nun.
Book Is not on our list. EDITION
LIMITED. Send at once.
Price ESctlitced to 35 Cents.
Address A. CHASE,
__Dedham, Mass.
^ The BXJVEKD’ GUIDE 18
issued March and Sept.,
^gieach IS|j elopedia year. of It useful is an infor- ency-
mation for all who pur-
|ir chase the luxuries or tha
’ necessities of life. Wo
can clothe you aud furnish you with
all the necessary and unnecessary
appliances to ride, walk, dance, sleep,
eat, fish, hunt, work, go to church,
or stay at homo, and in various sizes,
styles and quantities. Just figure out
what is required to do all these things
COMFORTABLY, and you can make a fair
estimate of tho value of the BUYEES'
GUIDE, which will be sent upon
recoipt of 10 cents to pay postage,
MONTGOMERY WARD & CO.
111-114 Michigan Avenue, Chicago, III.
RfiARV£i. 01 ie
i
DISCOVERY.
Wholly unlike nrrSficial systems.
Cure ol niimi ^vniideritiir.
Any book ienrnrd in one reading.
Glasses of 1087 at Baltimore, 1005 at Detroit, 12
1500at Philadelphia, 1113 Columbia at Washington, IG
nt Boston, large classes of Law students, at
igan Yule, University, Wellesley, Oberlin, Oliautnuqua, University &c., &c. of Penn., Ji doreed Mftffi- by
! Richabd Proctor, the Scientist, Hons. W. W. Astob,
; i Judah Cook, P. Benjamin, Judge State Gibson, Dr. College, Brown, &c. E.
H. Principal N. Y. Normal
I I from Taught by PROF. correspondence. LOISkTt’E, Prospectus 237 Fifth Ave.. p st N. free Y.
J O NES
PAYS 5 Ton the FREIGHT Scales,
Iron Levers, Wagon Bearings. Braii
Steel
Tare Beam and Beam Box for
SQO. Its*
Erery size Scale. For and free address pnc«
If mention this paper
I ™ IDflES OF OISOHAMTaS,
BINGHAMTON. N. V-
cm .I VT; h 1 oca
b
FLY KILLER
R a—^ Is quick death; easily prepared and
1 § * enough used; no to danger get away. ; flies don’t Use Jive it early, long
freely; rid the house of l hem and be
at pe ice. Don't take anything “,ju-fc
as good.” There is nothing like the genuine Dutch-
or’s. l’KEIVK l> \ T< II EU, St. Al a:is, Vt.
pSTH^A fegGerman Asthma Curenever/aiktogive QMBMW m-L
M,vied\.a(e relief in the worst cases,insures comfort-H
i able sleep; effects cures where a l others fjOc,and. fail A r
•trial convince#(he most skeptical. Price
I i All PREE! SSSS:
Oil I Fringed with Napkins, Paper io 3 white, months or eri) on
I 5 Curious Puzzles, YOUT our H. Dost Mass.
trial, for 12 cents. o n,
OIaibL ?5I3sj 8 rl!i3Sa Great Hhcumatic English Re.nedy. Gout and
Uval Box. :M; roiiu.1. I I P,ll..
UJ i For Agents, fend 10c for catalogne, to
•Amerh an Novelty Co., Hartford, Coen.
G O Ik l> is worth $500 per lb. Pettit’s Eye Salve is
worth $1.QQ0. but sold at 2T>c. a b by dealer s.
A. >\U .....................Twenty-six, ’88.