The Pickens County herald. (Jasper, Ga.) 1887-????, February 14, 1889, Image 4

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FARM AND GARDEN. Amount of Winter Feed. A cow or horse will need fromtweaty- eight to thirty-five varying pounds of food per day, the amount and kind according food to •izc of animal of given. "With the best chance for pasturing stock there will 1 e noarly or quite two hun¬ dred days of barnyard day or stab'e feeding. Thirty pounds total per fiOOO pounds, for this three time makes a ol or tons. If nil this the has value to of be purchased good it will cat into pretty stock at preient prices of feed, With ordinnry stock the farmer can only inako himself whole by feeding it with rough fodder Hint would not he readily salable, but may bo cliangcd into valuable man¬ ta re. —. 1 uteri'an Cult ivut/jr. Sweden I hr a I’ork Barrel. It is his quite an barrel ob'oet Inst for a farmer to mako and pork be troublo from year about to year, tlicro need no it, for the brine has a preservative wood quality that will prevent decay of Hie for a lifetime, so that only a hoop may need renewal occasionally. But where a barrel lias stood empty for weeks through the summer it will heroine mouldy and sour, and should be thorougly cleansed before it is used. I have never had any trouble after cleaning them with wood ashes and Lot water, and then rinsing them out dean. If meat barrel has has spoiled become in a tainted barrel so this that will the not ho enough to make it safe. ing In such lias cases been steaming or smok¬ recommended, hut probably fresh a earth more elective way is to till with and let stand a couple of This days, then empty and refill as before. is said to lie successful, hut for my¬ self I have always preferred buying a new spoiled.— one to using one in which meat hud New York World. Credit, Side of I lie Cut Aoeount. I have three large, well bred and full- fed gelding cats which keep llio pre¬ mises, consisting of barn«, sheds, wood and poultry houses, grain, hay and stiavv accessible at many points, to ray noth¬ ing of considerable covered space, so nearly free of do rats, mink, mice, weasels, etc., that, I not get a sight of eilhor oflcner Hum once a mouth, and then it is usually a young rat one of my faithful feline servants brings to me to show he has done his duty, The black-toil and prairie of Illinois is easily burrowed into, rats make underground passages any distance with almost tlio case of moles; grain abounds in most (le'ds, the gruss is heavy and long, hedges are com¬ mon, and everything favors tlio multi¬ plication three guardians, of tlio rodents. Wilhout the rat-i would ta';o the young chickens, suck eggs, undermine barns and shod*, gnaw into the corncrilm, cat hnif tho grain ami defile the other half, burrow into the stacks of grain, and make worthless chaff of clover aud hay. i"? ,°. 1,0Ct T, *?. rats b y H ose who hale them; but they are as mud prefer., hie to i a s as mosquitoes to bedbugs. -A«e York l n'ntnc. Growing Peppermint for Profit. ! The mints are nil cultivated in a simi- lar manner, only peppermint is much i grown for commercial purpose". qq )e soil should be rich, melfi.w, and moist. Divisions of the roots are dropped some six inches apart, about corn-planting time, in rows two feet apart, and kept clear of weeds. When tho plants come j in blossom is the proper time to.out them; I they are then carried immediately to tlio j laboratory, where they nre distilled into oil and usually sold in that form. The oil is chiefly usod to make essence, in which form it is mostly sold by druggists as a remedy for various ailments, though some is used for other purposes. The essence partakes of the nattiro of all labiate plants. As to Hie process of ex¬ tracting the oil, we are not fully advised, but think it is neiiher difficult nor ex¬ pensive The to one industry who understands the busi¬ ness. is considered a pro¬ fitable one in tho few localities wncro peppermint is successfully grown, but the prico of oil varies considerably in different seasons, so that tho profits aro not uniform. In case oithcr of the mints are to bo dried for use, it must bo done in tho shade, and the brunches should uot be- come plants wet in drying. For garden culture. each may bo sot one foot npart way. but it is A plantation will last for years, usual to renew it every threo or four years.— New ) ark Witness, Itiiitcruillk Is Important Food. 1 hore has been some dispute about tho , u *l , buttermilk, says the New Ln- gltma Home dead, but from a practical j test made by 1). \\. Little, this food is i proved to be more valuable than is ! commonly believed. Not having hogs enough milk, of his own to consume his butter¬ Mr. Little contracted to feed a neighbor s hogs at 4 cents per pound From May 15 to October:!! there were 64 head in tho pen, some being put in and some taken out every week. It was pigs. an uneven They lot of old hogs and young were quarrelsome, and of course did not do so well as would have been the ca^ had the same liogs been kept of together without a 54 break until the eua the season. The hogs weighed 61185 pounds when put in, and 11,455 pounds 5070 when pounds, taken and out. 4 This is is a worth gain ot at cents • $202.60. About 207 bushels of corn in the ear were fed with 64,357 pounds of milk. The corn cost $87.05, the milk 194 per cwt. and On 20 September averaging t, the 70 pen pounds was cleared, pigs, wero ♦hen kept there until October 1, when they averaged 170 pounds, 69 bushels pounds of corn, costing $2*.85, aud 17,157 of milk being fed. This made nearly 35 cents per cwt. for creamery butter¬ milk. Mr. Little estimates that had lie fed his own pork instead of feeding hogs for the neighbor, he would have realized 6 cents per pound instead of 4 cents,and that the milk through September and October would have brought him 41 cents per cwt. He says that buttermilk is commonly sold at 25 cents per barrel of 400 pounds, when it should bring at least $1. One great trouble is, farmers have too much milk and not enough hogs. One hundred bushels of corn to 20,000 portion. pounds of milk is the right pro¬ Pernicious Winter Seodlngs. There Is a kind of winter seeding not generally entering into the plan of the associated average farmer. Whiter is in thought with a period of rest and com¬ parative death in the vegetable world. The winter wheat lie* dormant in ita frozen bed beneath the white blanket ol fallen snow, end the ears of corn selected for next spring's seeding are stored out of the reach of the mice in the crib. All meadow and pasture laud sleep on until wakened by tne silent quickening of tbo spring. Nevertheless there ia a work going forward through the short days and nights of the severe months in the dead of winter. Every gust of wind that hurriet by the street corner and die. away in momentary calm; overy giant gale which comes down from tho frozen north and sweeps whole States with a besom of relentless fury, may carry with it the germs of weeds and deposit tlio them in rotne secure place where spring sun finds and quickens them into new life. all Bowings are not confined to tho newly harrowed field or the r'cli and mellow garden. If it were so, farming and gar¬ dening than would Ire a seeds less serious like those matter of it is. Many provided the dreaded Canada thistle we with which light, feathery seeds appendages long fiights by the ripened take in tho upper air like so many miniature balloons. Other plants, as the burdock and beggar's lice, rely for tran-portation which they upon the passing animals to adliero by hooks, thus stealing a ride, ethers still are left without any special structure for migration, and must there¬ fore depend in part upon the favoring conditions of winter. The various sorts of tumble weeds break up into a number of paits, or by a decay of the main stem at its union with the soli tho whole plant is set freo an 1 blown by the wind where it listeth. There are many weeds which remain upright with their seed¬ bearing portion above the fallen snow, and when the smooth crust ot ice forms over all, the seeds, loosened by the ele¬ ments, are blown for miles over the frozen surface only to find lodgment of in some ditch, hollow or other how place safety. velously This weeds helps spring to explain iu cultivated mar¬ Agriculturist. up ground. — American Farm anil Garden Notes. Feed the hay as It runs. Save your poorest hay for the lattoi part of spring. To make the butter,milk from healthy cows only should be used. Avoid excitement of the cows, pro¬ duced by chasing with dogs. Harsh treatment lessens tho quantity and reduce! the quality of milk. Milk vessels should ho thoroughly aud cleaned, scalded with boiling water aired to keep them perfectly sweet. The lawn will be the better for a fine top dressing, but do not make it un¬ sightly by strewing with coarse lumps of manure, ’There is little danger of manuring land too heavily for vegetables. Heavy fertilizing will always improve the health and quality of the plant. It is better to fill up the water trough befor o it is quite * empty than to let the C0W8 t ver / thirsty and drink hours. so much th , y c re to eat for two An Indiana fruit-grower puts a dozen patch ' .... lu3 ,l strawberry mo os ,n vc \ ao re eac \? eBr ! an< ^ , claims , that they save much in the grubs that they devour, It is said that a horse shoe nailed on the forward feet of a cow or steer will prevent jumping fences, as the foot can- spring. no 1 spread, hence tho animal cannot In spare moments nail up tho loose boards on fences, sheds and barns, rako up aud burn all useless rubbish and put weather, things generally in good trim for severe There is no danger that the business of raising eggs for market will be over¬ done, as million long as dozen we are obliged to iu import order several each year, to have onough to go around. There is an urgent demand for some succulent food for hogs in winter, as we now have only concentrated grain food with which to supply them, and this is not mals. wholly satisfactory for growing ani¬ About tho dust-bath—dry road dust is tho best material for tlio dust-box. Some perfectly dry wood ashes may powder, he mixed >>'. or a box of carbolic but don’t use clear wood ashes foe a dust- bath. They are too stroiur. A lady of Indiana says that when any of her hens in winter do not seem to relish tlicir food and their crops look full, she makes them fly from some high place and they got along all right. Do you see the philosophy of it? The swarming box should bo made of light material, board, two for sides the being cleatcd like a honey bees to pass through, and one end must be open or movable. The poles for the handles can attached as best suit the user, One of tho best fertilizers for house Pl«ts , . «• . , land , otartw. , . Sprinkle ., . , , it .. around . the 8tem ’ a,ul tbcn work U ^arefuily around the roots with a table fork. Geraniums and fuchsias are especially benefited by an application once a week. Chooso a warm day for fastening comb foundations in frames and sections. The foundation must bo warm enough to press into the wood nicely, and the wood should be warmer than the foundation to do the work to the best advantage. A putty knife will do the work quite well. If you did not build a silo but did cut up some corn fer fodder before all the goodness was dried out of it, get it from the field before all tho goodness is wasted. 8now, wind and rains do not improve fodder in the shock; house or stack it near where you wish to feed it. Don’t forget this. A fowl should be quick in picking up food, for when one is slow in feeding, occasionally taking a grain and then moping about, something is wrong. One can soon become expert in detecting other symptom* of disease ns rutiled plumage, lustreless sulphurous, eyes, pale comb and wattles, droppings green or watery. _ Miss Ethel Ingalls, daugter of Senator of Ingalls, is going to take charge the the Washington society column of a New York newspaper. She says she wants to make money in order to buy her father a new library in the place of the one that was burned. Chief Justice Fuller’s third daughter, Mamie, has a great talent for music, which she intends to cultivate. She is a sprightly beauty of the blonde type, and her favorite indoor dress is a Gretrhen costume of soft white material that is very becoming to her. and notes for women. Tho hair is worn very high. This is an ostrich feather season. The bustle has not been abolished. Fur is used on chilrdon’s coats and hats. The Countess de Paris is an export rifle shot. Tho Vassar College girl* have a Pro¬ hibition Club. Combinations of greon with blue are frequently noted. All black hats and bonnets are noted in great numbers. Lord Salisbury has declared in favor of woman suffrage. All varieties of white flowers are worn by brides this season. Mrs. M. Thomas is a practical shoe¬ maker living in Kansas. There are 11,40(1 female commercial travelers in this country. Two young women have opened a drug store in Buffalo, N. Y. The hood is an indcspensable article to ladies who travel this winter. The number of women who insure their lives is rapidly increasing. Flowers are used to a considerable ex¬ tent to trim the winter bonnets. The foundation of a majority of the winter bonnets are of green velvet. Bright plaids, combined with plain Stuffs, are a feature of little girls’ frocks. There are twenty-three women in¬ spectors in the New Vork Custom House. The proposal to have a London beauty show is being put into a business foim. The practice of bleaching the hair to a York. pale yellow is gaining ground in New Mrs. Harrison, wife of the President¬ elect, is said to be opposed to decollete dresses. Tho Russian Czarina, though neavlj forty years of age, has still a girlish ap pearance. Oxidized silver bracelets in link p it tern, set with stones of various colors, are in vogue. Mrs. J. Lawrence Smith has giver $■10,000 to tho Theological Seminary a’ Louisville, Ky. A wealthy lady in New York is pro¬ posing to endow a cooking school foi } oung women. Small tablets, bearing Chinese hiero¬ glyphics in relief, is the latest whim for the chatelaine. Tea jackets and house waists for al¬ most any hour of the day are of the new bordered silks. Boston cooking schools have educated the 1800 girls in the art of cooking during past year. A Kentucky Woman Suffrage Society has just been organized, with Miss Laura Clay for President. Mrs. Johnson, of Orange, N. J., has ridden over 1000 miles on her tricycle during the past season. Airs. C. P. Huntington, wife of thi Paefic slope millionaire, is nearly six feel tall and very handsome. The furore for ostrich plumage is st great just now that that the demand ii likely to exceed the supply. - ( „ apes, collars, ,, muffs, and trimmings . oi . monkey—which, by the way, is not iur— are in high favor this season. Side saddles aro going out of fashion in England, and the manly way of riding is being adopted by many ladies. Miss Eflie A. Southworth has been ap¬ pointed to the high sounding post ol assistant mycologist at Washington. Hats have a wide brim over the face, almost oval in form, and are intended te be worn set well at the back of the head. The low-crowned hats and bonnets, the advent of which has been predicted for some time, appear but slowly as yet. The eloquent Leonora M. Barry is re¬ elected director and investigator oi woman’s work by the Knights of Labor. Mulls are larger than for several sea¬ sons past, and are in soft, round shapes, none of the lining showing on the out¬ side. The newest fur collars the are back, deep and pointed, coming to forming point a at V at the waist-line ana it a front. Yarona Davis, the daughter of Jeffer sou Davis, has been in New York latel] seeing about the publication of her nun novel. Atterall, tho . handsomest, , , most , elegant, , , and becoming gown for a woman who ii not , f fat, short, aud clumsy „i„_,„ is • of . ,, black . velvet. Deep dark Russian blue is the favoriti shade of this color with the Princess oi Wales, who wears it on all possible oc¬ casions. At Roseburg, Oregon, is a “Ladies' Hammer Brigade,” the which makes a poinl of keeping down nails in the woodei sidewalks. Deep, round, fluted collarettes of cut work embroidery or lace are worn bj , little cashmere. girls with high-cut frocks of velvet j or j I Terra-cotta is a warm, comfottabh color. which keeps its good appearance * long white and does uot show dirt-t consideration. Tho Delaware State W. C. T. U. hai passed a resolution denouncing the Washington Territory decision disfrau chising women. 1 The sling sash which Mary Andersor wears With the l’erdita pretty pink gown ir | which she plays is a study foi young debutantes. Some very fine ostrich feather fans art made of only three long white plumes, mounted on a shell. jewel-tipped handle oi ivory, pearl or 51rs. Ole\ eland proposes to make tb< AN hlte House gayer this season than evei before, and to leave that domcile in a blaze of social gLory. Trimming fur is seldom used aboul the bottom of fur or cloth coats, but silk ! Rnd brocade pelisses are sometimes bound all around with fur. A cooking school lecturer has on hei sick list fifteen varieties of gruel. She gays that one of the moet palatable is 8 combination of cream, beef tea and bar¬ ley water. Mrs. Levi Morton’s eldest daughter, Edith, is a young lady of fifteen. She is described as a very pretty g.r!, with an excellent education and many graces of manner. STORIES ABOUT LINCOLN. Hia Peculiarities While Sitting for t His Portrait. Baptist Pastors in New York listened to some interesting remarks by A. J. Conant, the artist, on “Personal Remin- iscenoes of Abraham Lincoln." Mr. Conant said his first acquaintance with Mr. Lincoln came about through his be- ing requested to paint Mr. Lincoln’s portrait for the first exhibition of the \Vestern Academy of Art at -St. Louis. It was his oufltom, he said, in painting the this to go to Mr. Linooln's office in old .State building, as Mr. Lincoln was at that time (18(10) busied with political gffairs and could not find time for for- mal sittings. time Mr. Conant visited Mr. Tho first Lincoln for this purposo he found the expression upon his face quite the re- verse of the melancholy and serious one he bright, had animated, supposed and lie wore. genial that It was Mr. so Conant ot onoo mnda up hia mind to de- piet it if ho could. With this in view it was his custom to tell humorous stories, which, when they touched Mr. Lincoln’s faucy, made lum"forget for the time his absorbing affairs, One day Mr. Lincoln told how, when “running,” ns ho termed it, his grocery store at Balem, for near law. Springfield, farmer drove he got hw first taste A up with a broken-down horse and a wagon tilled with household “plunder," and he asked him what ho would give “fur the hull load." Lincoln looked over the bit of old pots, pans, kettles, and stuff, ,,,,,1 ana cave ga\e him nun nail half a a dollar aonat. The me man man went oil and Lincoln stored the stuff. Some weeks after the purchase Lincoln had oconsion to use one of the barrels, which were filled with some of the old “ truck" bought in the fifty-cent pur- on™. l,o turned out tl.e .entente of one of them, under the old lusty pans a dilapidated copy of Blackstone’s Com- mentaries came to light. Lincoln eyed it curiously and laid it aside. Later iu the afternoon he picked the book up and in began it, and to read. from He that soon day became he absorbed read all on the long leisure hours Which fall to the lot of the country grocer. This was the first direction inkling which he had of any taste in the in he afterward attained such success. The other story the artist told was one whioh he had himself told Lincoln, and which ho had used on several occasions, on two of whioh he had been interrupted before he got to the point, “and,” said the artist, “if there was anything which annoyed Mr. Lincoln it was this. It caused him always to remember the man from whom he got tho story. The story was of a Missouri man who went to a stable to get a horse to take him to a oonventibn to whioh he was going as a delegate with a hope of nomination. The stable keeper was of a different political horse persuasion, and gave him a which he calculated would break down before lie got there. His calcula¬ tion proved true, and the man lost the nomination. Gn his return to the stable; the disappointed Missourian asked the Btabloman if he was training that horse for a hearse. The man said, ‘Kinder guessed he wasn’t.’ ‘Well,’ said the man, ‘ if you are, he’ll never do it, for ho wouldn’t get a corpse to the oemetery in time for the resurrection, > II This story Lincoln had twice tried to tell, once from the rear of a train, and was carried away by it before he got to the point, and a second time, when present fired ot a gun testing, when the gun was sourian’s just as he reached the Mis- reply. A mysterious German nobleman died in bequeathing Washington last week, and left a will *90,000 to three gentlemen in Tennessee. Tho will is m proper form, duly signed and attested, but the legatees have been unable to locate the $90,000. It is a very exasperating situ¬ ation. They are entitled ta $90,000— unless the mysterious German nobleman was a practical joker. Diseases of an exbauetlve nature that have a tendency fatigue, to create an unnatural feeling such as lassitudo and great weakness lack throughout iron tho system blood. owe their origin to a of in the Brown’s Iron Bitters will restore the blood to its natural healthful condition. Get tho blood pure by using this remedy quished. and disease will be quickly van¬ Alinister to England Phelps has been select¬ ed as president of Columbia College in N. Y. A Wood oil nl Rood an<! Medicine, Known and used l»y Physicians all over the world. Scott’s Emulsion not only gives flesh and strength by virtue of its own nutritious properties, that builds but np the oreates wasted an body, appetite “i havebeen for food usi and ?* am 5 ,®SP pleased TT Emulsion with its action. for several My patients years, gay it is pleasant and palatable, and all grow stronger and gain flesh from the use of It. 1 I use it in all cases of Wasting Diseases, and it isspe ially useful for children when nutrient medication is needed, as in Marasmus.”—!’. W. Pierce, M.D., Knoxville, Ala. The grand total of the expenses of New York city for 1889 will amount to £33,034,339. Conventional " Xlonon ” Resolutions. Ry Whereas, Tlio M non Route (L. N. A. world C. Co.) desires It to make it known to the at large that forms the double connecting link of Pullman tourist travel between the winter cities of Florida a d the summer re- 6 ^Whereas? ...... Its°“raphl . transit” system is un- eurptv-sed, Chair its elegant Pullman Buffet Sleeper and car service between Chicago and Louisville, Indianapolis and Cincinuau un- equalled; it’lowest; and then be Resolved, That in the event of starting on a trip it is good Gen‘1 policy Pass. to consult with K. O. Mc¬ Cormick, Dearborn St.. Chicago, Agent for Mcnon Route, 185 full particulars. (In pjgtasted 1 " Cnd £ ° r * louriBt Uuid ' 3 ’ enclose 4c. that 1 have a positive remedy for the above send uong^my'faith free sample 0 bottle ^ its and vir° tues that I will sufferer a who will valuable treatise to any give me his P O. and Express address. Respy, York. H.G. ROOT. M. C , 183 Pearl St.. New * Last Winter I waa troubled *o badly with rheumatism in my right ahoulder and joints of my leg as not tollable to walk. I took Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and now I don’t feel any aches or pains anywhere, and it not only stopped the soreness in my shoulders and jointe, but makes me feel as lively as a ten year-old boy. I sell nowsj'arers right in THIS MIDDLE OY THE 9TOELT, and standi ? g on the cold stones Ain’t no picnic, I can tell you. An 1 if Hood’s Sarsaparilla cured me it cer¬ tainly ought to be good for tho?e people Y-ho don’t stand on the cold st* lies. I can be seen every day in the year it corner Tompkins aud DeKalb Avenues. W. W. Howard, Brooklyn. N. T. Hood’s SarsaoarMla Sold by all drugriets. $1; six for $5. Prepared only by O. I. HOOP k CO., Apotliecarles, Lowell, Mass. IOO D ses One Dollar 4 gents wanted. $lanli ta . 5,1 n w »riie es.Cat’lgue and samples free. O. E. Marshall, Loekport, N. Y. A Swindler Betrayed by Uls Parrot. Deteotivos obtain their hints and clues many sources, but it is not often (tbo Paris correspondent of the London Telegraph remarks) that they receive through yetthis the is just instrumentality what has hap- of poned during the researches of M. Goron, the head of the Pans Criminal Department. This officer has been of lately the looking for the chief aocountant “Cafusse Band,’’ a fellow named other day Victor Chevalier, and, going the into the rooms of a notorious receiver of stolen goods in Paris, he heard himself addressed in harsh tones as “Good old Victor 1 there you are 1" This was enough for the deteotive, who having loquacious Silently satisfied himself that the bird was tho property of the man for whom, he was looking, proceeded to search tho receiver’s den for indications of n more substantial character. After a long and minute investigation of the premises, lie found a letter from Victor to robber tho announced reoeiver, in that whioh he epistle in Angers the was under the name of Felix C'rozer. M. Goron immediately sot out for that town and arrested tho owner of the too valu- able parrot in the railway station, a Terrible Crime, It is a terrible crime for men to claim that a deeoction of cheap and poisonous * vegetable rinff . _ is . a certain . . remedy , for syphilis, ,, scrofula and other horrible phases of blood disease, when they know it is untrue! The proprietors of Bo- ta rd 0 Blood Balm, (B. B. B.), are men of con- sciences. Their remedy is not a poison, and aUh h a p(m . rfu i blood cleanser, is absolutely frce from mercury and all vegetable or mineral poison. Its use Mill not harm the most delicate, and a cure begins with the first bottle used. It “ made according physicianwho to the prescription for forty of an em- inent Atlanta has, years, b‘‘ cures of blood diseases than any other remedy in tho whole world, George \V. Childs, of the Philadelphia Lcd- gcr, gave $10,000 to hisemployes at Christmas. How Nice! A child who lias once taken Hamburg them Figs as a cathartic will never again look on as medicine, but will be likely they to ask simply for them, under the impression that are pre¬ served fruit. 21 cents. Dose one Fig. Alack Drug Co., N. Y. Catarrh Cured. A clergyman, after years of suffering vainly from that loathsome disease. Catarrh, and trying every-known remedy, at last found a prescription which completely cured and saved him from death. Any sufferer from this dread¬ ful disease sending a self-addressed stamped envelope to Prof. J. A. Lawrence, 8S Ntarien St.. N. Y., will receive the recipe free of charge Safety to mother and child and less un¬ pleasantness after confinement, result from use of Mother’s Friend. Sold by druggists. Diamond Vera-Cura FOR DYSPEPSIA. AND ALL STOMACH TROUBLES SUCH AS diptsa, Indigestion, Constipation. Sour Stomach, Fullness Heartburn, Nausea, Gid- after r eating. eating, Food Food Rin-ug Ri h ng in in the the Mouth Mouth and and dii disagrees able t taste after eat eating. i ng. > er vousbcss and LowSpirita. At Druggists rid Dealers or sent by mail on re¬ ceipt of 26 ets. (6 boxes $1,00) in stamps . Sample sent on receipt of 2 -cent stamp. The Charles A. Vogeler Co., Baltimore, Md SENT FREE. Every reader of this paper who expeots to buy anything in the line of Diamonds, fine Jewelry, Silver aud Clocks—or who thinks of buying A WATCH Should send for our new illustrated catalogue for 1889, which we send free. J, P. Steiens & Bro,, Jewelers, 4 1 Whitehall St., ATLSHT4, GS. gaff FOR THE BLOOD Swift’s Specific has cured me of a malig- nant breaking out on my leg. called -which caused intolerable pain. It was Eczema with by the doctors—four of whom treated me no relief. I candidly confess that I owe my present good health to S. S. S.. which in my estimation is invaluable as a blood remedy. 222*7 N. Miss 10th Julia St., St. DeWitt, Louis, Mo. tacked Our baby when two months old, was at¬ with Scrofula, which for a long timo destroyed despair her of eyesight her life. entirely Tho and caused Us to doctors failed g ea B w ast’to relieve her, and we gave Swift’s Specific, which soon cured her entirely, and she is r now hale and hearty. E. V. Delk, Will’s Point, Texas. ^ Scrofula developed on mydaughter—swell- &a$5ss§)Bg&nd iglggRg Swift’s Specific, lumps on and her the neck. result We gave wonder- her ha fcflss &ful and the cure prompt. SL was m S. A. PEarmond, Cleveland, Tenn. tySind for book giving history of Blood Diseases and advice to sum rors, maile 1 free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3, Atlanta, G-a. The Only Printing Ink Works in the South. HODGE & EVANS, Manufacturers of all kinds of Printing Inks, ATLANTA, GEORGIA. M OTHERS’ FRIEN D IAUSCHILD BiiSTHiASY IF USED BEF ORE CON FINEMENT. Book to ‘‘Motiiiks'’ Matled-Free. BRABF1ELD REGULATOR CO., ATLANTAJGA Sold bv all Druggists. PmAMBMSfl IV’5 Q AT A R Rf| wfeverB| N, | Ely’s Cream Balm.) iffa COLD IN HEAD ELY BROS., 66 Warren St., N.Y. Blair’s Pills. G ~i3*“.™“ Ora I Box, 34 5 round 14 PHU. BlflUE STUDY. Book-keeping, Business Forms II thoroughly Penmanship, taught Arithmetic, by MAIL. Short-hand, Circulars free, etc. k Bryant’s College 457 Main St, Buffalo, F* Y. PEERLESS BYES Sold Arc by tho Dnuoc HR ST. i.-tl W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE GENTLEMEN. FOR Best in tho world. Examine his SK “■ 22*2° 92.00 and WORKINGMAN’S S1.75 BOYS’ SCHOOL SHOE. SHOES, All made in Congress, Button and Lace. is W. L. DOUGLAS S3 SHOE LADIE8. FOR CADTION ssalsi Rheumatism and Neuralgia These twin diseases cause untold suffering. Dootors sdmlt that they are difficult to ouro-i __ so do their patients. Pained \\ SSP I Jf Celery manently compound cured the has worst per- (fSJ \A// jj I cases ot rheumatism and neuralgia—so say those who /fcby AA U have used it. ^ /ktA "Having been troubled A 7 Gl\ with rheumatism at the Imee >. and toot tor nve yoars, I waa I FOR . 1 SALE .. almost and was unable often to get confined around, . bed very for weeks at NO USE TO to my a time. I used only one bote OWNER.. tie of Palne'9 Celery Com¬ AW cured. pound, around, a boy.” and and I Frank can Eureka, teel waa now cauoli, as perfectly lively Nevada. jump as “ Paine’s Celery Compound has been a God* send to me. For tbe past two yenrs I have suf¬ fered with neuralgia of the heart, doctor after doctor falling to cure me. I have now taken nearly lorn- bottles ot the Compound, and am free from the complaint. I feel very Village, grateful Ct. to you.” Chas. U. Lewis, Central Paine’s Celery Compound "I nave been greatly afflicted with acute rheumatism, and could find no rellel Until 1 used Paine’s Celery Compound. After cured using six bottles of this medicine I am now of rheumatic troubles.” So. Cornish, N. H; Samuel Hutchinson, Effects Lasting Cures; Paine’s Celery Compound has these,—copies performed many of other cures as marvelous as letters sent to any address. Pleasant to take, does not disturb, hut aids digestion, and enUre- ly vegetable; a child can take It. What’s the use of suffering longer with rheumatism or neuralgia? $i.oo. six for $5.oo. Druggists. Mammoth testimonial paper free. Wells, Richardson <t Co..Props.,Burlington, vt. DIAMOND DYES Owe Faster and Brighter Colors than ant/ other Byes. BA8IES LiVinal ‘P 0, j^‘ acta ^ e, j F'^darc •fifeofjtyi HE-NO. STANDARI The Tea that has gained such H a Expositions. reputation at nMCMKK&<! TEA! The proprie- MSRTINGILlETS®i \ tors of HE-NO SSI guabantee^’\ Tea aro Martin ' Gillet & Co., a wmwmiigg K.: house established at Baltimore in -V I-..- mm 1811. fy Mention this paper and send your address for a 25 cent book, free by mail, charmingly illustrated, en¬ titled “Tea Gossip,’’ which tells all about Tea, how it is made in China, and exposing its humbug. Send in silver or stamps, ten cents for an eighth of a pound sample package of HE-NO Tea. Address Martin Gillkt & Co., Lombard Street, Baltimore, Md. to D PUSS H WHITE (o \\-» TRADE HARR. succnssons T0 MORDECAI LEWIS. JOHN T. LEWIS & BEOS., WARRANTED PURE White Lead, Red Lead, Litharge, Grange Mineral, Painters’ Colors and Linseed Oil. CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED. 5 T0S1OADAY! AGENTS WANTED! UWCII-.CUULRS FBK2. m 1000 Drewstcr’s Safety Rein Holders GIVEN AWAY to intro duce them, Every horse owner horse’s buys from 1 to 6. Lines never under juKl feet. and Send packing 25 cts. in for Ftampe Nickel to V a LP° Plated 8 ^: IU® age Sample that sells for cents. Address 111 65 259 Brewster Mfg. Co., Holly, Mich. CONSUMPTION rerat-d.v for the above disease bv its use l have a positive ; standing thousan ids of cases of the worst kind and of lonor that have been cUTed. So -irony la my faith In its elncAcy valuably 1 will sond two bottles free, together with a and treatise on this disease SLOCtJM. to any sufferer. C.. 1*1 Glre Pearl Express St, N. T P. O. address. 1 . A. M. ANTI-DYSPEPTINE. The most successful and certain cure for DYSPEPSIA 8ICB INDIGESTION, NAUSEA, CONSTIPATION and HEA DACHE. Insist on your Druggist getting It for you or send SI to the manufacturers. The PRIVATE FORSCLA CO., Lebanon, Ohio. SALESMEN!! be trade. our in our wholesale goods * Largest line. fcw by Enclose men and aampl® mana- re- ta 2-cent postals stamp. answered. Wages Money $3 advanced Per Day for Permanent wages, advertising, position. etc. No Centennial Manufacturing Co,, Cincinnati. Ohio. Sk BUSINESS EDUCATION! m fckiual to the best, and entire expense only one* half Address required NORTH elsewhere. UEORUIA Students can AOICI- enter at anytime. CULTURAI* COLLEGE, DaliL>ti<KH. Go* DETECTIVES Wanted in every County. Shrewd men to under infttr UCtlOQf In our Secret Service. Experience not necessary. Perticuls art free. Graanan Detective Bureau Co.41 Arcade,Cincinnati,A, ObstobSSSS® IS YOUR FARM A FOR Wright, SALE 233 Broadway, ^ t/X) N.Y. If «o address Cubtis mu Live at home and make more money working for us than I at anything else in the world. Either sex. Costly outfit FREE. Terms free. Address, Truk & Co., Augusta, Maine, I O C "postpaid, * >rb 7 0 VVe * •tWer!** t - I ' 0< * et ^ c J c ^°P^dl a contains over 500 c'ncw°Y useful and contents, d)® O. P- KEKBY, 0G WestS qrk A. N. U. Five, ’89. Established 1772.