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FABM AMI HARDEN.
Soo to the Dairy Stock
Professor L. B. Arnold, oneof the best
American authorities on matters pertain-
ing to dairy husbandry, declares that,
after studying the effect* of (he customary
treatment of dairy stock for over thirty
years, ho is confident that “scanty feed
needless n summer draughts, and pinching with
exposure tqcold in winter, keep
die annual product of the cows of the
would : nun try forty with jicr and cent, below what it
be fair constant rations
he year round and comfortable lion-
,ng. ” This is far from complimentary to
surlmtt. r and cheosu makers, but only
mnfirms the recent, statement of another
writer, namely, “Unit wo need a new
race keep of dairymen, who sr
to n cow in milk r condition
the year round.” Xrw Yoi It' it kiss.
ftpedalries in I lowers.
M. b. b axon says in the Aiiriculturist :
Hoses, carnations, and a few oilier flow
era appear to be popular at all times,
while others have their Reason* and pe¬
riods of popularity, niter which they rc-
turn lo •eeming obscurity. As it is ini-
possible for one pefson to grow to perfec¬
tion many kinds of flowers requiring
different treatment, this fickleness in
flowoi fashions is not an uumised evil.
it Jn is raising the flowers, specialists as in who any achieve other work, the
greatest success. The beautiful chrys-
have mthemums, for instance, which of lute
attracted so much attention, arc
have most exclusively grownfoy persons who I
devoted all their riirr^iir; to the
iiiTfi^ium have ot the Jp 1 . nits. neglected, Annuals and
they lately been muHi
yet are of the e.ysi.-t cultivation.
and in beauty second fo none. They are
the flowers for everybody. They muv be
»own dinvily in the open ‘ ground, or, if
the season is late, in window-boxes or -
hot betls, transplanting the seedlings in I
proper time. Asters bal ams, pansies,
and many other-, afford inviting special- i
lies. Give the annuals a chance this
summer, and do n-u forget to plant a
few seeds of the single dunlin. !
,, , cc ‘" n « . E «*"-
Over-feeding is injurious to all breeds, !
but especially so to bight Brahmas,
Coin should be excluded Irom their diet,
except in extreme cold weather, when it !
imiy be given in a mixture of corn, wheat
und outs, us a hot mash in the morning,
Oatmeal scalded and made Ihe consist- 1
ency of mush, into which a handful of
dessieated fish may be mixed, is one of
the best egg-producing foods that can be
given On alternate mornings flaxseed
meal may be used in place of the fish.
A pint of whole wheat to every twelve
fowls is iillieient for an evening meal,
and 11ns should be thrown among leaves
or chuff to make, them scratch for it.
Haw meat should be given three times a
week and suspended A cabbage fastened the by a string the j
from center of
hen hoiise, just . high enough to make ,
them jump for all they get, is an excel-
lent, thing. In short, any means that
can be devised to make them work for
(hen fuetl, with tlio oxveptioii ot their
morning meal; and even that should be
light, simply giving enough for an appe¬
tizer will be found of great benefit to
I'tom actual experience we have found
Ihut pure-bred Brahmas, by careful feed
jug, call lie made far better layers than
hall-breeds, and if intelligently bred can
combine fancy points and eggs.
Ihe Object to he gamed in raising
chickens lor early market is to have them
to weigh from one and a hall to two
pounds should in the shortest time possible. food
1 hey be led upon such us
wili cause the least amount of shrink¬
age Inclusive use ot soft feed will put
flesh such upon the that carcass shrinkage rapidly, but be of
a nature the will
at least six ounces to a chicken dressed).
io avoid this, whole wlieiit should enter
largely into their diet. They can be
taught to eat it when a few days old by
crushing the whole a grains. portion of The it and mixing with
flesh of a chicken
raised on soft feed presents a shriveled
dressing, appi at,nice, which especially on the breast after
never occurs when dm
turds are fed upon grains as well. Noth¬
ing can be more delicious than the flesh
of chickens grown to weigh two pounds
in eight weeks .—Par in, field and H»ck-
•Mil,
Ensilage Experience.
At a meeting of the Kansas Board ol
Agriculture Mr. A. G. Pierce made a
report feeding on building a silo, tilling it, and
out the contents to cattle at dif-
ferent ages, (u this report he says:
“The sill) Which I have in use‘is built
of stone, and is entirely above ground,
It is ”4\I8 feet outside and 20 feet hio-h
My silo is divided into tw o rooms. Two
doors, one above the other, open from
each room of the slip into the bam on
the north of it. The walls of the silo.
first 10 arc loot thick; tipper 10
feet IS inches thick. 1 would recom-
mend a wall 2! feet thick at least for a
silo^hM’oet high. My, wails wore laid up
iu lime mortar, and the inside of the
walls and floor were plastered with
cement. Such a silo as 1 have described
will hold nearly 500 tons of ensilage.
AVhen tilled I covered with havand then
laid rough planks over the'hay, and
weighed with stone at thc rate of about
1200 pounds to the square yard. It is
not necessary laid that smooth. the planks The should weight be is
grooved of considerable or importance in pressing
out the air. A silo entirely holding 500 tons ground, can
be built of stone, above
for less than $500. Oneof the same
capacity can be built iu a bank, or side
of a bluff, sides where the be grouud cemented, is firm, for less so
that the can
than $250. If 1 were building asilo to-
day, aud a high bank were convenient, 1
would excavate aud build mv silo some-
thing like a bunk barn. 1 would cement
the sides like a cistern, and would put a
heavy wall on the open side. 1 would
make a portable or movable roof, which
could be removed while tilling the silo,
and covered easily when full and
weighted. built the north side
“My stable is ou
of the silo, and holds 160 head of cattle,
fastened in staneheons. In feeding, the
ensilage ia loaded into small cars hold-
ing about one thousand pounds.
track of the car the is suspended be from the of
floor above car. so as to out
the way of any litter that might fall upon
the floor. I am feeding now about
twenty-five pounds of ensilage and twice a
day to each grown animal, animal, about
fifteen pounds to each young 1
im well satisfied that it is the best and
heaped food in Kansas.
“Corn is the easiest grown, and tlio
best thing I know of to fill a silo, fto far
I have used ilto common field corn.
\e\t year I shall try the mammoth awcef
corn. One part of my field was listed
j y‘‘sr about the 1st of April, and
| ll ” ain the same way, splitting tho ridges,
j about the thickly 1st of May. j should We dropped the ker- tho
' r<,, u 'Cry say three inches
' vt ' r '' lll ’ 0,lf two ‘>r
I apart intending drought to cut the crop for tho
M’lo. The came, and this jmr-
ticulnr field of of corn the walks was quickly being withered,
ou account close to-
' '-'ether. I concluded to c ut up this
! fodder, and for the silo wc
used t orn which had been planted about
j the had usual listed di.tanco this ground of planting twice, and corn. I
some
1 of it three times. This corn was heavy,
averaging about fifty bushels to the
acre, and weighing green about tweyty
tons to the acre. I commenced judge by
weighing average loads. We
cutting about the 1st of September. The
ears wore in the milk or dough, and the
talks green clear down to the ground
and about twelve feet high. Tho corn
was cut anil thrown in piles. Four teams
were used to haul corn to the cutting
machine. Some of it we cut half an inch
and some an inch long. This made no
difference in its keeping. I used a four-
horse power, and some of the time I used
si x upon it. The elevator is about thirty
feet long, one end attached to the cut¬
ter, and the other resting upon the top
of the wall of tlio silo. I think with a
good force of nine men that about forty
tons of feed can be cut and put m silo in
one weighted day. Corn can be grown, cut, and
down in a silo for less than one
' 1 ol,1 ‘ r > ,i r not the rent of
' l "A 10 1 111
'
M r * »*«-■«;« . , - . enailnge to be the , best .
. . for Bk “ lk < ' alvca ’ They
‘ br,Ve ° U 11 . '""'T thau a, 7 klnl .... ?
wl,on ‘! 1VC lnoal ?» m ' '
| 0 "’ 11,8 C0W8 « ,vu ' '« rnos " lllk wben
U,< 7. ,lre wtlli ens.lagc . h oi
! ,,,lk ")« fr< . ' , ‘’ < <,r ” or ot ><’r K r ui»s shoo'd
bo fct V ,n connection with Jt. It is much
easier to feed cattle from a silo than from
a hay stack. At the last a man is exposed
to the cold and to storms of snow and
rain, in the first he is sheltered by a warm
building. Much of the hay in a stack is
blown away while feeding it out, and
more is iiijUicd by snow and rains. I.n-
silage does not blow away and snow and
rain cannot reach it. A silo, if filled of
suitable material, eanniff. bo blown down,
mid it is not liable to be burned. The
most, successful cattle raisers iu the state
are those who have silos,
l’itliy Paragraphs.
Watch and hoc.
Breed up and not down,
Clean baskets and crates arc good
salesmen.
Cut clover at, or just before, tho bight
0 f bloom,
It is highly extravagant to use low-
priced Fine mower oil. soil is mulch that will
surface a
antagonize drought, will
Fly nets to horses save oats to
more t han their cost,
Cut orchard hay. grass in early bloom later
it makes poor
The hog doesn’t object to a seasoning
of cureulio in Ids fruit.
Keep harvesting in mind for two weeks
before the work begins,
Paint applied to umlried, unseasoned
wood only hastens decay,
If the weather is dry, mulch around
trees transplanted this spring, and
Double the use of water oxternally
discard hot liquids internally,
The less you disturb the sitting lion,
the better she will attend to her busi-
ness.
There is no profit in ministering to a
im^r diseased when tho disease is swine
. ) t a , ru e.
. Better feed the inferior fruits and vege-
j ; tables to the hogs than to send them to
market,
The secrets of large yields always aud
everywhere are rich soil, good seed, and
thorough tillage. and is
Beauty always semi attracts, bright it berries not
dishonest to clean,
all d fruits to market,
Buying hay caps may be a species of
gambling w ith the w eather, but they are
| good “There lottery tickets place to like hold. home,” and
is no
when xve observe some homes we are very
l thankful that there isn't.
It is as un just ns it is unwise to shoot
tho llilds because they take a few berries
they have earned a least,
U hon thc wlfp ,md ' bildren attend to
tl,u r ou,,r - v ' l( J 311 ’ 1 fair to oil. exchange eggs
bn tobacco and machine
To bo thrifty an animal must be coin-
birlubte. This is true in the spring or
» u,m,u -* r , as well as in the winter.
The work horse will be benefited by
spending the agreeable nights on the
pasture after it has made good growth,
Blowing under grass and clover makes
lat'^o^t mUution to tlio soil of the
best kind of plant food at the same cost,
: There is tins difference between the
V°°. 1 alu ; t ‘ 1 ° l inner; one com-
pbHBsofthe bad seasons, tho other re-
joiees m the good seasons.
A good crop of both corn and weeds
cannot bo grown on the same, ground at
tlio , same time, . any more than , two rail-
way trains can pass each other on the
same track .—Amenctu Aoricmurut.
A Ghoulish Industry.
A French paper describes a factory
which is said to be flourishing at Ht.
Denis, France. Within its walls human
skeletons are “made” in the following
manner: The largest room of the build-
ing is tilled with enormous kettles in
which the bones of the corpses are boiled
until all thc flesh is separated separately, from them, and
The in the skulls are careful prepared One
most manner. way
of preparing the skulls of children and
young people is to fill the hollow where
the brains are situated with peas, and
then let the latter swell in water, which
causes even the most delicately injured, joined
bones to separate without being
After all the bones have been carefully
washed, they are bleached, either by
chloral or by exposure to the sun, and
are then joined in another department of
the factory, and aro made flexible by
means of brass wires. Most of the
corpses whose bones are utilized arc said
to be brought from hospitals, prisons and
dissecting rooms, and the latest Kusso-
Turkish war is said to have brought
much “material” to the factory,
Total abolition of slavery in all British
! colonies occurred August 1, 1888.
The Destructive Teredo.
Those who have wat'-heil the vwfls
hauled out on ttio marine railway and
noticed tlio pieces of plunking taken
. from them, will have seen that some of
them are completely honeycombed. Thin i
is caused by tho ravages of the t redo, or
ship of pile worm, one of the groat.it I
pests in Southern wuters. Use e •t ks t
on this subject say:
“The shell is thick, short and glahn-
Jar, widely valved, open in front and tie- j 1
kind, lodged at cylindrical the larger tube, or inner ex-
tremity of a parti or
entirely and often lined with both calcareous ends. The inkier. 1
open at v:tjv,
are reduced to rnero of their appendages circular at the , j
foot; in the centre j.rotruded, the wliole open-
ing t!,is organ is !
forming a very efl'. otiial boriti;; pechhar a^nra- ;
tus, which is indicat' d by their |
shape, strength, arrangement of the val- *
vular ridges, and great size of the ad-
ductod muscle. Tho animal is el.mga- j j
tod and worm like, tho length 1.. y> luj,
chiefly each respiratory to the prolongation tube, the back siy i
.
which are provided with two cn, 1
triangular, which flattened always turned plates, the the j
of aro to j
nal morsed aperture. They boring attack in the wnij dirk- 1
in water,
of the grain, and only turning aside
when a hard knot or a companion is
struck, detected the presence of the latter being The '
by the sense of hearing.
dust of tho rasped wood is introduced by !
and the cavity into being the mouth usually by the foot |
swallowed, found fill- j
mg the long intestine.’’ ,
[11 tho construction of tho wharves in
this harbor, palmetto piling hrolght "1 j
from the small islands on the I ,T 11
coast have been found to wil’i e, ; the
ravages of the teredo bette. than any
other material. The cost this of marine replacing nui-
tho piling destroyed by will amount to
wince in these waters
thousands of dollars annually, and vos-
sols not coppered or having their bot-
toms sheathed with metal have t# be
hauled out every three months® for
repairs. Home years ago a brig arrived Ann-
here from an English port,and lay
chor in the stream for several weeks
during tho summer. The craft was not
coppered, and on returning to her homo
port was hauled out, when it was dis¬
covered that tho bottom had been com-
plately honeycombed by tho teredo, and
it had to be replaced by new planking.
—Galveston News.
Buts in China.
A plague of rats is reported in China,
which recalls the German legend postal of the
rats of llamelin. Certain routes
have had to be changed in (inter Mongo¬
lia on account of the honey-combing of
the whole country by myriads of rats, the
who have burrowed and eaten up
pasturage so extensively that the supply
of food for camels and horses is greatly
diminished, and the burrows are danger¬
ous to all mounted travelers and couriers.
The prize offered by the Australian Gov¬
ernment for a riddance of the rabbits
which infest that country may afford a
suggestion to the authorities in China to
offer inducements which M. Pasteur or
some unknown Whittington may find
advantageous enough to undertake the
task of ridding the country of these
vermin.
Why Tiucy Moved.—A little Harlem
boy whose impecunious parents are al¬
ways moving from one house to another,
was asked by the Sunday-School teacher:
“Why did tho Israelites move out of
Egypt?” “Because they couldn’t pay
their rent, I suppose,” was the reply.
John Half, of Westbrook, Ga,,
named his first child First Half; his
next, Second Half; his third, Other Half;
and his fourth, Best Half. He says that
his blessings conic in halves.
'V «« Avnuricn Ever Discovered?
At tlio time when Columbus started in
search of the New World, nearly insisted every that man. here
woman and child in Fnropc (
was no New World to discover. When lie
came back, crowned with success, a large their pro¬
portion of these good people adhered 10
theory;and if they were alive to-day many of
them w ould doubtless insist that America had
never been discovered at all. A man will Kivo
up anything in this world more readily than a
pet theory. For example, look at the individ¬
uals who still mainiain that consumption Medical Dis¬ is
incurable. Dr. Fierce's Golden
covery has cured thousands upon thousands
of cases, and will cure thousands more, but
t Peso people can’t give up their point. No ver-
theleSH the “Discovery” will cure any case of
consumption, if taken in time.
Nothing *' more liable to cause loss of appe¬
tite than cal ing.
CAN T SLEEP!
Sleeplessness and fearful dreams
are the earliest and surest healthy signs
of brain exhaustion. In
sleep brain force is being stored
up to meet the next day’s de¬
mands. But has nowadays been the nerj
vous system so over- 1
tasked that it is unable to i-ontrol
the mind, and at night the worries,
troubles, and work are as present
as during the day. lienee the
brain has not time to recu¬
perate its energies. The proper
medical remedies are sedaiives, and
nerve tonics, laxatives,
regulators of b, the and general celery func¬
tions. Coca are
the soda vw fives and no
tonics de tip' man 1'
and i n AW Ju l’ai
Celery I E,
pound full ben f efi V
effect is “ P jj
Italsoeon tains, in ’
scientific. ■ r Ji .port ions
the best! remedies of
the ma V’ 1 Bkteria niedi-
ca for con \ \ st ipation
and kidney 7 and liver
disorders, This is a
brief des L cription
ofthemedi cine which
lias brought sweet rest to thou¬
sands who tossed in sleepiest
ness from night to morning, of
whose morbid dreams caused them
to awake more tired than cvet
All nervous, sleepless, debilitated,
or aged people will find vigor and
perfect health in the great nerve
touic, f a nt-’s Celery Compound.
Price, fl.00.
Sold by druggists. Circulars free.
WELLS, RICHARDSONiSCO. Proprietors
BURLINGTON. VT.
A roST-OFFICE ROBBERY.
How tho Thleies Managed to Get
Into the Safe.
A post office inspector says:—-I went rob-
up into Minnesota to investigate well-to-do a
i„ ry. The postmaster was a ambi-
< iennan merchant, whose greatest
tion is to be postmaster. Ho has a son,
‘Nick,’ a round-faced little bov, who was
„n smiles and smartness. When tho
..ostmaster received his commission ho
culled Nick to one sido confidentially: der
‘Nick, I am dor best master; you are
assistant bostmaster. Der government don’d feel
tmst ns with broberty, und I
righd alioud it. I must go down to Ht.
j»j u ,i U1 ,,\ j )ny a safe.’ Ho the old man cost
went and bought a new safe that
$125. They got it in place, put all the
stamps and other government property
into it, and two weeks later burglars en-
torod tho building and the safe was
opened and robbed. When I got on the
ground tho postmaster first wanted to
read his political speeches in the last
campaign and tell mo how much lie
thought of tho administration, but we
got to Business finally. He showed m..
q U ito on easy trick—and then showed
tho safe. ‘Und dese doors was open just
os ( ] e y nre now p he said. I looked over
the safe; it was brand new—not a mark
of violence on it anywhere, nor locks dis-
turbed. I told the postmaster Nick
mus t have forgotten to lock it the night
of the burglary. This brought Nick to
pj 8 ; a a paroxysm. All at once
Homotlfiog caught my eyo on the wall,
It was: ‘Turn to tho right three times,
stop at 37; to the left twice, stopping at
yi ; to the right once to 84—open.’
“ ‘What is that?’ I asked,
“ «Oh! dot in der gombination. ” You
see, when I g< t this now safe in they
Bon t, a card up from St. Paul with that
on, but I forget him, and Nick he lose
him, so I just mte dot up on der wall
where we can see him.’
“ ‘And you can’t imagine how the
thieves got into your safe?’
“ <j haf buzzled my brain over it for
two months!’
“• ‘Don’t fb&mi you think tho thieves might
have the combination on the
wall ?’
“A great light seemed to
upon, tho honest German ‘bostmaster.’
He opened his eyes wide, looked again the
at tho safe and the combination on
wall, and then, with a big sigh, remark¬
ed: ‘Well, now, maybe dot was so.’”
Lassoing Tramps. —Officer Orguello,
of the Los Angeles police, carries a las¬
so, and he finds it of great assistance in
catching tramps who may desire to evade
him and the jail which awaits the cap¬
tured tramp in that city.
The Ue-nlt of Merit.
“When anything siansls a test of fifty years
am‘>iig a discriminating peop'e, it is pretty
good evidence that there is meri somewhere.
Few, if any, medicines have met with such
continued success and popu arity as has
ma ki d the pr. gross of Bkandreth’S Pills
which, af era trial of over fifty years, are con¬
ceded to be the safest ind most effectual blood
purifier, tonic and alternative ever introdu-ed
to the publ o.
That this is the result of merit, and that
Bra ndiseth’s Pills perform all that is claimed
or them, is conclusively prov d bythef.et
that those who regard them with the greatest
favor are those who have u-ed them the
longest.
Bra.adbeth’s Pills are sold in every drug
and medicine store, either plain or sugar-
coated. _____
K,the motor man, is trying to invent a
toboggan that will run up hill.
Chronic nasal catarrh positively cured by
Dr. Cage’s Remedy.
There is no such word as "fail” among tile
fruit preservers. Their motto is: “I can.”
Don’t neglect your teelli, they are too valu¬
able. t’sc Long’s Pearl Tooth Soap.
Beck & Gregg Hardware Co,,
, x , o^..
■
Prices Write for nnd j
mention this I
paper.
■ r a m
■
,
tliV'r?
il/p ITS A*;.
it' Ki^f A
^ A IIP m
i jtj-: v, : a 11 pi
4 •J ■: Wm
Do want" 7 ootfi, reliable
un<i
s
'■ * !
; 1
WATER ay loaaiua
r-i
SUPPLY f vkAsrfi
M JONES
w HE
PAYS the FREICHT
* Iron 5 Ton Wagon Steel Seale ies, Bnu«
m Levers, St Be aria IRS.
Tare Beum at id Beam 1 Box for !
die SSO.
| ’ Krerj Seale. Kor Tree pnee Usl
Mer.tion this pnper ami address
JONES CF BiNGHAMTiN,
BIMillAMTON. N.
\ij, Outchers-:-M 6 ......
FLY KILLER
- Is quick death; easily prepared and
i ' ^ us>*d ; nodanger ; flies don't live long
\J enough to get away. Use it early.
freely ; rid the house take of them and be
;v. i>(';:<'u, Don’t anything “ju-t
g<; d." There is norhing like the genuine Dutch-
er’s. I R l !>■ tv III T< UEK.st. U aas, Vt.
LA POP V-6 ri.WTVTioN for salk:
ri m lj-HI a .-res, saw and grist mill 1 m-
; provements, store, post-office, ash, hickory orchards and and vineyards, timbers!
up and swamp iaud. *^ . other
good neighborhood, line condition for cotton, tenants,
churches; six nc'Ios from K. R. station. Address Roivr.
L. R 'DGKBS, Room 3d, James Building, Atlanta, Ga.
PlSOS CURE FOR CDNSUMPTION
/ _L D L D worth $500 per ib. Pe - it’s Eye Salve is
VJ worth $ 000 , but is soid at 25o, * box b.v dn»!«ra.
CANE MILLS,
F URNACES.
Evaporators
If so, wrlte BIK()\VN Cc I(INGI
Cotton. Manufacturers \Voolen and Dealers and Gen» in 2
erul .Vlill Supplies. :
' “Wrought and Iron Brass Pipe (Jomln. llittingn‘ J
5; S. BBOAD Six, ATLANTA. GA. 1
Oaten trial Exposition.
Cincinnati will be filled with visitors
until the last of October. In Festival, quick suc¬ the
cession, the May Musical
National Encampment Knights of Pyth¬ Odd
ias, the Patriarchs Militant of the
Fellows, from all parts of the country
and Canada, play their parts in that city.
Beginning 4th of July, the Centennial
Exposition holds a hundred days’ jubi¬ of
lee in honor of the 100th anniversary
the settlement of the Northwest Territory.
Not only Cincinnati and Ohio are inter¬
ested in this celebration, but ten other
sovereign and independent states clasp
hands and go to the aid of their sister
commonwealth, in showing to the world,
by means of a monster Exposition, improvements what
marvelous changes within and their borders
have taken place
within tire space of one hundred years of
their history.
Why is the tramp like badly printed calico ?
lie won't wash.
For constipation, “liver complaint,” or bil¬
iousness, sick headache, and ail diseases aris¬
ing from a disordered condition of the liver
and stomach, take I)r. Pierce’s Pleasant Pur¬
gative Pellets—a gentle laxative or active
cathartic, according to sizeof dose.
Anarchy is in tears. Two breweries caught
fire last week.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬ bottle.
son’s Eye'water. Druggists sell at,25c. per
★ ft 'k ★ ir
“IBHE 1 STARRY HIGH,” FIRMAMEHTO 1
* * * OK * * *
-^■Sang Addison. But hadn’t^- least,
you, for a few years at
rather look at the firmament
from the nndersido ?
★ YOU CAN DC IT
by observing the laws of Tf
health and resorting to that
cheat-the-grave medicine
★ Warner’s Safe Cure ★
You are out of sorts; appetite a splen¬
did feeling and one
day,while the next drift day life is
a burden. If you on in
-»^-this way you are liable Why? to-^-
bccunie lusattic.
Because poisoned blood on
the nerve centers wherein
the mental faculties are
^located, and victim paralyzes becomes them' 5 ^
the non-
responsible. thousands of
There are peo¬
ple to-day in insane asy-
linns antl graves putx
thereby Kiducy-Poisou-
ctl Ulootl.
tics, Insanity,according is increasing faster to statis¬
than
^any eye-sight other disease. failing ? Is Your your
Au memory becoming feeling impaired?
exertion all-gone ? If on so,and slight
upon whether you this is^f
XYOU know
so or not, do not neglect your
case until reason totters and
you are an imbecile, but to-
a day while you have rea- .
"son, judgment useyourgood purchasing sense and"
ARNER’S by S.4
W F E
★safe CURE and WARNER’S medicines^
PILES;
warranted to do as represen¬
ted,and which willenre you.
★r ★ : - fr *k
MAUV CLOUS
DISCOVERY.
"Wholly unlike artificial systems,
t in e of mind avm nderin
Any hook learned in one reading.
Classes of 1087 at Baltimore, Washington, 1005 at Detroit, I‘J Mi
I 500 at Philadelphia, of 111;? Columbia at I
at Boston, large classes Oberlin,
YaJe, Wellesley, University &c., &c. ot ±*enn Endorsed by
igan University, Chautauqua, ihe Scientist, Hons.TV. W. ASTOit,
Rrcn.Mii) Proctor, Dr. Brown, E.
Judah P. Benjamin, Judge Y. Gibson, Normal College, &c.
H. Cook, Principal N. State
Taught by DROF. correspondence. LOISET l'E, Prospectus 237 Fiith Ave.. post N. FREE i Y.
from
Hege’s T\ ith Universal Improved Log Beam Circular Saw Mill
Rectilinear Simultaneous Ec-Jfc§
centric Set Work Friction and Double . % Jj
Feed. Accurate! II J ta is*
Simple! Durable! Cheap! Manu- r
factored by IRONfgg^Sg
SALEM jKjigli
SA WORKS, I,Ell,
c*
¥m,
for Pric* Mist. GttaWorJuLPittaburffh^^Swr
Seines, Tents, Breech-loading: double Shotgun at $0.00;
Single barrel Breech-loaders Double-barrel at §4 to $12; Breech-loading
Hides $1.50 t-o §15: Muzzle loaders at $5.50
to : Hepeating Rifles, 10-shooter, $14 to $30: Revolvers,
f l to *20 ; Vlobert Rifles. * 2.00 to$s. Guns sent O. <>. D. to
examine. Revolvers by mail to any P. O. Address JOHJi-
ITOVS GREAT WESTEKX »,l \ WORK*, 1‘itUburg, IV nna.
as
(« ASTHMA Asthma Cure nexerfails CURED give
erma n to im¬
mediate able sleep; relief effects in the worst whero caneM,insures others comfort¬ fail
c a res all A
(rial convinces (he most skeptical. Price 60c. and
$11 .(KRoi Druggist Im. IV SCHIFFMAN, s or by mail. Snmple St. FR Minn. E K
lorstamp. Paul. ;•
fail
cn to $8 n day. Samples worth Si.50. FREE
Lines not under the horse's feet. Writ©
Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co.. Holly, Mich.
Cincinnati OCT. JULY42,(0 27th.
Sis
sr
... .............iji iiii|i|i|i|iiii Wi
4
CEinjiLEiposmoiKolio vhllet
GRAND JUBILEE celebrating the Settlement of Pie Northwestern Territory,
UNSURPASSED DISPLAY.
.
EXCURSION RAT E S FROM ALL POINTS.
B. B. B.
(Botanic Blood Balm.)
Observe the following editorial from the At <
lanta Constitution, the foremost paper of thrf
South:
“The Constitution has observed the growth of
an Atlanta institution now famous well-nigh the
world over. It is the Blood Balm Company who
make B. B. B. Wo have watched the course of
this medicine in hundreds of cases that appeared
to be hopeless, and it lias worked amazing cures.
Wo tako pleasure in giving our endorsement to
the men who nuke up this compuuy. They tiro
truthful, accurate and conservative business nicy
or physicians. They liave the confidence of the '
people among whom the)' live, and their medi¬
cine speaks fur itself. A whole library does not
outweigh the heartfelt testimony of one man
who, in despair from a disease, no doctors have
been able to cure, and other remedies aggra¬
vated, finds that B. B. B. has restored his
health, vigor and manhood. And just such tes¬
timony the Blood Balm Company have by the
bushel.”
No other remedy in the world can produce the
number of genuino testimonials of remarkable
and seeming miraculous cures as can B. B. B.,
mado in Atlanta, Ga. Bead a few here sub¬
mitted :
KIDNEY WEAKNESS.
For fifteen years my liver and kidneys have
been badly affected—not a day in that time
without the headache. Since using II, B. B.—
Botanic Blood Balm—I have been entirely re¬
lieved; no pain, no trouble at all, and I feel
almost like another person. I am one among
the greatest advocates of B. B. B. and you are
at liberty to use my name. Mbs. t'. H. Gay,
Rocky Mount, N. C.
RHEUMATISM.
Newton, N. C., June 25,1887.— Gentlemen: I
am pleasured in saying I have been a sufferer
of rheumatism for ten years, and I have ex¬
hausted almost every known remedy without
relief. I was told to try B. B. B., which X did
after long procrastination, aud with the ex¬
perience of three bottles I now feel a healthy
man, and take it as a part of my duty to make
known your wonderful blood purifier to suffer¬
ing humanity. Respt'ly, W. I. Morehead.
BRIGHT’S DISEASE.
I have been a sufferer from kidney and blad¬
der troubles for several years. I have lately
had what is termed Bright’s disease, and have
had considerable swelling of my legs and
shortness of breath. The urea has poisoned
my blood also. I used (B. B. B.) Botanic Blood
Balm. Am delighted with its effects.
John H. Martin,
Rock Creek, Ala.
TONIC.
1 have for some time past used B. B. B. as
a purifier of the blood and to build up ihe sys¬
tem generally, and consider it without excep¬
tion the finest remedy of the kind in the mar¬
ket. Yours with best wishes.
Arthur G. Lewis,
Editor Southern Society.
WEBER
PIANO-FORTES.
ENDORSED BY THE LEADING ARTISTS, SEMI¬
NARIANS, AND THE PRESS, AS THE
BEST PIANOS MADE.
PriceR aft reasonable and terms as easy as consistent
with thorough workmanship.
CATALOGUES MAILED FREE.
Correspondence Solicited.
WAREROOM 3 ,
Fifth Avenue, cor. 16 tbSt.,N.Y.
rVtfFKSiKlt
mis DOOR IS .NOT OS Oil LIST. *
1 Confessions
Edition Send at Address
limited. Price 35c. once. MASS.
A. CHASE, DEDHAM,
‘SSVJtt 'JCVIKUttCI 3SVHO v
BSdjppy '03UO padg •asc -patron
patfoosjuo fo SUOtSSdJUOQ
* TSIT 11.10 SO I0V SI 3008 Still /“*%!
irivixNaalo. t» — a. — —yp
Plantation Engines
With Self-Contained
RETURN FLUE BOILERS,
I FOR DRIVING
[COTTON GINS and MILLS.
> Illustrated Pamphlet Free. Address
I James leffel & Co.
I *or 110 SPRINGFIELD, Liberty St., New OHIO, York-
! BLOOD POISONING, »;u T &rS S rof '
9 the
U rinary Organs positively cured or no charge. Our
medicine is a preventive of Malaria and Yellow Foven
Full size sample bottle sent free on receipt of 25
cents ‘h prepay postage. Address THE if ART
IIKDH’I.M: CO., Box 301, Unionvillu. Cl.
GINSENG AND RAW SKINS
ISmivlit for cash at market prices. Send for
circular. O TTO W AG NER, 90 Pr in ce St„ N ew York.
Sa _■ Great English Gout and
PluaT SrlllSa Rheumatic Pills. Remedy.
Oval Boxi 31i round, t I
GOLE Live at home and make more mon cy working for ns than
I at anything else in the world. Either sex. Costly outfit
FREE. Terms FREE. Address, Teue & Co., Augusta, Maine,
A. N. U....... ........Twenty-eight, ’88.