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AGIUCULTU11AL.
tOPirsoF INTKRK8T RELATIVE
TO I’AKM AND GAHDEN,
BALT FOIt BLACK WEKYD1.
I will state for the information of all
interested, says a Texas fanner in the New
Pork Herald, that the common black woe-
ril can be kept out of corn after it is
fathered, or killed if already in it, by
nixing salt through the corn as it is put
in the crib and occasionally sprinkling
ihe corn with water to cause the salt to
iissolvc. It is not necessary to dissolve
til the salt at the time of cribbing the
:om as it will continue to dissolve, ex-
;ept in dry and windy weather, and will
io so oven in dry weather if it is very
warm. Do not throw the water on in
quantities, as is the custom of some per-
lons in this section. This causes the water
Mid salt to run through to the bottom in
large quantities, resulting in damage to
tho com at the bottom, also to the floor¬
ing and foundation of tho crib; beside,
it may not leave enough salt in the upper
portion of the com. Some years since I
noticed here a small brown weevil in cot-
tonseed meal, Tho same weevil, or one
very much resembling it, is now to be
found in corn here. The salt and water
remedy docs not entirely exterminate the
brown weevil, but lessens their numbers.
This weevil damages corn very little. I
llso had inites in my corn the past fall,
which the salt and water exterminated as
well as the black weevil.
TO OET RID OF SHEER TICKS.
The ticks which arc so numerous on
Iambs after the ewes are sheared are the
cause of the lambs nibbling themselves
and of their failure to do well. These
insects annoy the young animals exceed
ingly and should be got rid of at once by
the following means: Procure a tight
box or vat large enough to hold a lamb,
und another with a slooping floor, from
which the drainage can flow into a pail;
make a deooction of tobacco stems, one
pound to a gallon of water; pour boiling
water on the stems and steep them until
the heat is reduced to 120 degrees; add
two ounces of sulphur to the gallon of
water with the tobacco. Put sufficient
of the liquid in the first vat to cover the
lamb all over but the head and put the
lamb into it, biking care to get the
liquor thoroughly into the wool, put the
lamb into the draining box and squeeze
the liquor out of the wool. So proceed
through tho llock. Keep some of the
liquor hot in u kettle to replenish the
vat. Sometimes buttermilk is poured
on tho back of the lamb and spread all
through the wool for tho purpose of kill¬
ing these pests. Where there are but a
few lambs tlio ticks may be killed with a
pair of sharp-pointed scissors, as they arc
found by parting the wool on the sides
of tho animal .—New York Times.
HAY MAKING AND CARE OF MEADOWS.
In making hay, farmers are apt to
become too much hurried with drawing
In, so that they do not give the hay
time enough to cure und sweat; hence
it becomes mowburut, musty and dis¬
colored. It has been my observation
that the best way to harvest hay is to
cut early, so as to secure a good, green
color. Let the hay lie and have plenty
time to dry; use tho tedder and then
rake and cock it. Loading from the
windrow is a bad practice. The hay
may appear dry after the hot rays of the
sun have poured upon it five or six
hours, hut it is so only on the outside.
It should be cocked up and have time to
sweat before it is put in larger masses.
The markets demand hay of good color,
and it pays well to use extra efforts to
secure such. llay that is cut early
wilt bring two dollars per ton more than
that cut later uud allowed to become
yellowish.
Though hay-making is important, the
care of tho meadow is equally if not
more so. It is best to seed with fall
crops at the time of sowing or in tho en¬
suing spring. Do not pasture much, aud
if the meadow is seeded to timothy, don’t
pasture at all, or the meadows will soon
“run out.” Pasturing will cause June
grass to start and there will soon be
timothy. I know of meadows ten
twelve years old that yielded from
ond a half to two tons per acre
year. They were never pastured,
HUGHS0N & SULLIVAN’S SURREY BUGGY.
A
..aSV >
rCTo. BE.
Tho Surrey Bngffy If* fast to taking tho place of. of the Phreton, os it Is much tighter and neater in
appearance ami just as easy get m ana out
Write for Prices and Catalogue on our full lino of work including Wagons, Carriages,
Carts and Cutters.
IIUGIISON & riULLIA AN,
tUmifActunors for tho Trade, EOCHESXEB, GST. "ST-
—
W-
1 I
We will insert yon m a nice, well-displayed ad-
rertisement at ai low rates as any first-class
paper can afford to do. Advertising rates made
known on application.
SUPPORT YOUR HOME PAPER
spring were harrowed, and where thin,
new seed was sown. Every two or three
years a quantity of phosphate was sown,
at the rate of a few dollar’s worth per
acre. This enriches tho land and gives
n good growth of grass, If the fall is
wet there will be quite a growth after
cutting. In spring where this autumn
growth dried I it it s burnt over. This
warms the ground and gets rid of tho
old dead grass, which would otherwise
be raked up and spoil the sale of the
hay. Tho ashes act as a fertilizer.
I have been speaking of timothy meud-
ows. With clover a good crop of seed
can often bo secured as a second crop
after haying. As to which is the better,
clover or timothy, it depends upon the
soil, etc. Timothy brings the best price
_the coarser arid longer the better—
while clover makes the best pasture. It
is better to put hay in barns or sheds
than in stacks, as stacked hay is liable to
become dusty, There cannot bo too
much care taken in raising and harvest¬
ing lmy. Human beings want their food
to be well prepared, and so also do tho
dumb beasts .—American Ayriculturut.
FARM ANI) GARDEN NOTES.
Toads arc the gardener’s friends.
Clover stubble is good chicken pas-
ture.
The cedar bird is a great devourer ol
canker worms.
Excitement reduces the milk flow.
Don’t let the cows be hurried from pas¬
ture.
Insect remedies are of little avail un¬
less applied promptly, with due persist¬
ence and care.
A quart of oilmeal and bran a day
will make a marketable lamb out of a
poor one in a month or two, uflirins Farm
Journal.
A beekeeper says he knows of no other
single plant from which tho bees gather
so much pollen as from the box cider.
A crop of beans will ripen in timo to
escape tlm late frost if planted June 20,
says W. II. Hull in American Garden;
then string beans aro assured to Septem¬
ber 15.
Unless you have some choice birds
from which you wish to breed next year,
dispose of all cocks as soon as the breed¬
ing season is over. They are only an ex¬
pense and an annoyance.
Steer clear of leaky roofs, broken win¬
dows and drafts generally, and all other
conditions that generate roup, unless you
are studying for the veterinary profession
and want lots of practice.
Feed your fowls systematically two or
three times a day; scatter the food, so
they eau’t cat too fast or without proper
exercise. Do not feed more than they
will eat up clean, or they will get tired
of that kind of feed.
The public taste, it is said, is being
steadily educated to demand fresh butter.
As a result it each year becomes more dif¬
ficult to handle held summer stock. Tho
farmer who keeps abreast with tlio popu¬
lar taste is most likely to reap the pecu¬
niary benefits arising therefrom.
Insuring Elevator Passengers.
A recent phase of accident insurance is
the taking of risks on passenger elevators,
which cover not only damage to the
elevator itself but promise to indemnify
the owner of the elevator for such sums
of money as he may be compelled to pay
to people who have been injured oi
killed by any accident to the “lift.” The
amount of this indemnity is, of course,
limited, in proportion to the premium
paid and the holder of the policy is ex¬
pected to allow the elevator to be ex¬
amined by the company’s inspector at any
time and to conform to certain regula¬
tions and requirements in runniug it.—
New York Tribune.
Velocity of tho Groat Nevada Glacier.
The Virginia (Nev.) Chronicle says;
The great glacier on the northern flank ol
Mount Lyell in Mono County, neai
Lundy,has moved at least ten feet within
a year. Last May parties built two mon¬
uments of rocks five feet high, one being
placed at the edge of the ice and the
other at a distance of fifteen feet. The
upper monument has disappeared and the
lower one is cut five feet from the ice.
Accurate measurement from several per¬
manent points show conclusively that the
glacial movement northward has beet
considerable all along the line,
EOK * AKM AND GARDEN.
BUTTING URNS.
The mother cautioned her son against
roving by remarking that rolling stones
gather no moss. He retorted by saying:
“Betting hens never get fat.” The
reason for this latter observation is that
they are almost always troubled with
lice. If u hen wants to set in the hen¬
house break her up and allow only
those to set who choose a place en¬
tirely by themselves. Then they will
neither give lice to others nor take it
from them. If a setting hen becomes
lousy the lice will after the clutch is
hatched, attack her chicks and kill them.
Rub the chicks with grease and the lice
will disappear. Oil, not kerosene, is us
good an insectide for lice as any one need
want; but do not put it on setting
hens, us the oil will dose the pores in
the eggs und addle them .—American
Cultivator.
THE TOMATO AS AN IN8F.CT.xn*.
A Mexican journal gives the following
experience of a French agriculturist,;
Two peach trees of my orchard were
covered with insects, just as they were
about to flower. Having cut several
tomato vines, the idea occurred to me
to place them around the trunks and
branches of the peach trees, to shelter
them from the rays of the sun. What
was my surprise, on the following day,
to notice that all the insects had dis¬
appeared, except from the leaves be¬
yond the influence of the tomato plant.
I carefully separated these leaves and ap¬
plied the tomato to them, when the insects
disappeared as if by enchantment, and
from that time the peach trees began to
grow luxuriantly. Wishing to carry the
experiment further, I put some of the
tomato leaves in water and sprinkled
other plants, such as the rose bush,
orange tree, apple tree, pear tree, etc.,
with the infusion, which also had the
same effect of completely freeing them
of insects within a few days.
HOW TO MAKE A COOL CELLAR,
A great mistake is sometimes made In
ventilating cellars and milk houses. The
object of ventilation is to keep the cellars
cool and dry, but this object often fails
of being accomplished by a single mis¬
take, and instead the cellar is made both
warm and damp. A cool place should
nover be ventilated unless the air ad¬
mitted is cooler than the air within, or at
least as cool as that or a very little wanner.
The warmer the air the more moisture it
holds iu suspenvion. Necessarily, the
cooler the air the more the moisture is
condensed and precipitated. When a
cool cellar is aired on a warm day, the
entering air being in motion appears cool,
but as it fills the cellar the cooler air w’ith
which it becomes mixed chills it, the
moisture is condensed and dew is de¬
posited on the cold walls, and may often
be seen running down them in streams.
Then the cellar is damp and soon becomes
mouldy. To avoid this the windows
should only be opened at night, and late
—the last thing before retiring. There
is no need to fear that the night air is un¬
healthful ; it is as pure as the air of mid¬
day, and really drier. The cool air en¬
ters the apartment during the night and
circulates through it. The windows
should be closed before sunrise in the
morning and kept closed and shaded dur¬
ing the day. If the air in the cellar is
damp it may be thoroughly dried by
placing in it a peck of fresh lime in an
open box. A peck of lime will absorb
about seven pounds, or more than three
quarts of water, and in this way a cellar
or milk room may soon be dried even in
the hottest weather.
If a cellar has a damp smell and cannot
be thoroughly ventilated a few trays of
charcoal set around on the floor, shelves
and lodges will make the air pure and
sweet. If a large basketful of charcoal
be placed iu a damp cellar where milk is
kept there will be no danger of its be¬
coming tainted.— Co’.mcm’s Mural World.
PRUNING SHRUBS.
Shrubs, like trees, are pruned for
different purposes, and no one rule will
apply for all cases. The shade tree re¬
quires pruning, but not of the same kind
ns the apple tree, which must be pruned
with the view to making it produce the
best fruit, and a liberal supply of it.
Shrubs are similar to trees in this respect.
8ome are pruned for grace and symmetry,
while others are pruned in order to make
the production of flowers greater. Shrubs
should not be cut back ruthlessly, as
many ungarden-like gardeners do. They
should be sheared off evenly and uni-
formally in growing iu a border, Grace
and beauty are the two things desired,
and this cannot be obtained any better
than by trimming the sides over off in
a symmetrical curve. Single, isolated
plants should be made to assume the ap¬
pearance of an egg or a perfect sphere.
Flowering shrubs should be carefully
pruned. Every branch that is lopped off
is likely to carry with it several buds
which would in time present handsome
flowers. If the pruning is done after the
buds are formed the shrubs will attempt
to repair the loss will by throwing out new
shoots, which bear abundant flowers
the following spring. In this way prun-
ing will sometimes encourage a" strong
growth of flowering wood. In pruning
it is not always advisable to adopt a treat-
ment that has only one season of flower-
ing in view. The time of flowering is
short, and the general shape and grace of
the shrub should also be had in view
when cutting off the branches. Even in
winter a gracefully-trimmed shrub has a
grace and beauty of its own. As a general
^ Vto^pai^S ?gor lli or b to cl min a ii
natural outlines. Weak shoots should
£
plant.
CROWS IN THE CORN FIELD.
At a discussion at the meeting of the
Connecticut State Board of Agriculture
on the question, ‘ ‘Can Crows be Prevented
From Pulling Corn?” Mr. Webb said, he
made an agreement with the crows years
ago that if they would aot pul] his corn
he would feed them. “When I sow mj
com for the crows,” says he, “I do not
poison it, but I sow it in different part*
of the field. They pick it up and while
so doing they pick up many worms.”
Mr. Ellsworth pursues the some course
and thinks an ailowunce of two quarts of
corn much better than to lose 100 or 200
bills of corn.
Several farmers claimed that by apply¬
ing tar to the seed when planting, tht
crows will not pull the corn. Mr. Day
reckons the destruction of corn by crows
in New England by thousands and thou¬
sands of dollars. Mr. Day has succeeded
in driving off the crows by hanging a
small looking-glass with u short string on
a slanting stake driven in an elevation in
the corn field. Mr. Fcnn said tarred corn
was not an absolute preventive. The
looking-glass scheme is all right when the
sun is shining, but without effect in
cloudy weather.
Secretary Gold resorts to strychnine.
“A little sprinkled with this poison field and
distributed here and there in the was
sufficient to leave a number of crows in
the field. The crows held indignation
meetings all about the woods on the sub¬
ject. They left my cornfield, and last
year I planted the same fields and others
adjoining on my farm, and the crows did
not trouble me at all. They transmitted
their experience of the previous year. Mr.
Seeley had a similar experience, using a
gun, however, instead of strychnine.
Mr. Chamberlain added the following;
“I think the efficiency of the various
methods of defending our cornfields de¬
pends upon the familiarity of the crows
with them. I remember an East Hart¬
ford farmer telling me it was useless to
undertake to scare them at all, because,
he said, the crows have been fighting
Yankees for 200 years, and they have
learned all the tricks. I thought I would
see if I could not get a little the start of
the crows, so last year, as my field was
not protected in any way until after the
corn came up, and I found that a few hills
had been pulled, I carried a bundle of
newspapers to the field. I opened them
and spread them over the ground, putting
a stone in the middle, allowing the wind
to sway them, making at times quite a
disturbance in the field. I found it was
a perfect protection.”
FEEDING WORK HORSE,A.
There is no place where a farmer is
called upon to use better judgment than
in the care of his work team in the stable.
Says the Western Stockman and Cultivator:
The team is required to do constant and
severe labor day after day, and must be
kept in constant health to endure the
strain. The variety of food at hand is
limited to dry corn and hay on a great
many farms, and it is almost impossible
on such diet to keep a team in good
health. The stomach of the horse is
smaller in proportion tohis size than that ol
any other animal,and as the horse is more
active than other large animals he ought
to have nourishment in its least bulky
form and oftener than other animals.
Feeding often is impracticable when
much work is required of him, so the
horse must make up at night for the
wear and tear of a clay of starvation and
exercise. With this in view a good horse¬
man will provide his team with the clean¬
est and most nutritious food. He will
also provide a variety of foods so as to
keep up the appetite and meet all the
wants of the system. Where corn is the
only grain grown on the farm and the
only rough food is prairie hay, it will bs
some trouble to provide a variety of food.
But there is always a way if there is only a
will. Some corn can be sold and with
the proceeds wheat bran can be bought,
a small amount of which, mixed with
corn, will produce excellent results. A
small amount of clover hay can be pro¬
cured in every neighborhood. An oc¬
casional feed of clover hay, moistened,
will be relished by the team, and has a
feeding value almost equal to oats, pound
for pound. Some good farmers keep their
teams on clover hay alone without any
grain whatever. is important
Care in watering horses as
as feeding. A horse has only one sensa¬ he
tion at a time, and when he is hungry
don’t want water, and when thirsty he
don’t want food till he is watered,so that
it is impossible to lay clown a rule for
watering. It is a good plan to water be¬
fore feeding, especially in the morning,
and if the horse seems very thirsty do not
let him have all he will drink. Watei
him again some time after feeding, also.
A horse will not digest his food if he is
wanting water, and panting and ex¬
haustion often noticed is generally caused
by indigestion from not getting enough
water to supply the system. In such a
case it will pay to take a team to water
no matter how great is the hurry.
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
Watch the colts’ feet, and thus prevent
misshaped feet.
To be sure wool is kept free from dirt,
better sack the fleeces as soon as sheared,
even though you are not ready to sell.
Size alone does not make a desirable
horse to breed to, for a draft horse cov¬
ered with blemishes is not wanted by
buyers.
Birds always prefer the open air. They
do not favor remaining indoors, no mat¬
ter how clean and bright the poultry-
house may be.
The poultry-house should be built with
a view of promoting the comfort of the
fowls aud keeping them in a proper con¬
dition for laying.
If cows are not kept up all of the time,
and fed in a stable on succulent foods—
brau and meal—then they should have a
regular feeding night and morning.
It may be set down as a rule that the
more special dairy blood a cow has the
more certain is she to turn her food into
milk solids and not into fat and flesh.
Comfort is essential in the dairy. This
must not end entirely in the effort to keep
the cows out of the cold. In summer
they should be kept out of the heat and
away from flies.
Always assort your eggs. Do not have
several colors and sizes together. Put
the dark eggs in one basket and the light
ones in another, and pick out the small
ones to be sold separately.
A CHALLENGE TO THE WORLD.
GOOD POSITIONS—GOOD SALAltlEB—PRAC¬
TICAL BOOK-KEEPING—LIGHTNING CAL¬
CULATIONS—FAST MONEY COUNTING.
Jennings’ though Business College, Nashville,
Tennessee, yet in its infancy, has
on its register more than six hundred
students from seventeen states and terri¬
tories, 00 per cent, of these have secured
good positions in localities scattered
from New York to Mexico, and from
of Washington these Territory to Florida. Many
young men are receiving salaries
from $000 to $1,500 per annum.
The students of this school are taught
not only practical book-keeping and com¬
mercial usage, but are also taught to cal¬
culate interest by the shortest rule ever
discovered, and by this rule many of
them have been able to get the interest
at 0 per cent, per annum inside of five
minutes on one hundred examples of $1,-
000 each, the time to run in each case
was years, months and days, and no two
periods of time alike; this is at the rate
of three seconds to the example.
The principal of this school having
had experience as a bank teller, teaches
his students the art of rapid money count¬
ing. The rule is to take a package
amounting to $500, composed of thiriy-
nine bills as follows; Twenty bills in
5’s, ten bills in 10's, five bills in 20’s and
four bills of 50’s, then secretly remove
one of the bills, either a five, a ten, a
twenty, or a fifty, and require the stu¬
dent to count the package twice correctly
in succession, taking the slowest time of
the two counts for a record. Many of
the students have accomplished this in
10 seconds, and one of them in 9£ this sec¬
onds. Now, therefore, believing
time of 9£ seconds to be extraordinary, I
challenge the students of any other busi¬
ness college in America (or out of it) to
equal this time, and I challenge any bank
teller in America (or out of it) to beat
the time one second; I also challenge the
students of any other business college, or
any person who has not attended this
school, to equal the time in interest cal¬
culations above mentioned. A copy of
this has been mailed to the business col¬
leges and bank tellers throughout the
country. It. W. JENNINGS,
Principal Jennings’ Business College,
Nashville, Tenn.
A Long-Lived Turk.
Those who are anxious to remain in
the flesh beyond the ordinary duration of
this mortal life will be interested in the
habits of the old Turk, who recently
died at Iladdatha, aged 130 years. Old
Hadji Soliman Saba had seven wives, all
of whom died before him, he was the
father of sixty sons and nine daughters,
who have also gone the way of all flesh,
and the year before his death he was
thinking of marrying again, but could
not obtain the necessary funds to buy a
bride. Saba was a farmer unto his life’s
end; his diet consisted maiuly of barley
bread, beans and water, and only twice a
year in high festivals, did he eat meat.
His clothes were even more simple than
his diet, consisting of a shirt ouly, and
when he traveled, a pair of trousers. His
bed was a mattress and straw mat, and it
had never been a ’’bed of sickness” till
thiee days before his death.
Value of Silk-Worms.
The value of silk-worm cocoons grown
in the world annually is enormous. The
last great estimate of the world’s silk
product it was calculated that it reached
the grand total of 67,000,000 lbs., which,
at an average value of about 16s. per
pound, realized over fifty-three and a
half millions sterling. China contributed
23,000,000 lbs., value over eighteen and
a half millions; Japan to the value of
£3,400,000; India, £7,000,000; Italy,
£12,000,000, and France, £6,200,000.
Our Girls.
Kittty Nottlo is witty,
Is pretty,
Lutio is cuto and small;
Irene is a queen,
Annette is a pet,
Nell is the belle of the ball;
Diantha Is wealthy,
Bertha Is healthy.
And health is the best of all.
Perfect health keeps hor rosy and radiant,
beautiful secured and by blooming, wholesome sensible habits and the sweet.
It is and uso
of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. Bertha
takes it, and she also “takes the cake.’’ The
only guaranteed oure for those distressing ail¬
ments peculiar returned. to womon. Satisfaction or
your money
For Constipation or Sick Headache, uso Dr.
Pierce’s Pellets; Puroly Vegetablc. One a dose.
The greatest of fools is lie who imposes that on
himself, and thinks certainly he knows
which he has least studied, and of which he
is most profoundly ignorant.
but “Stick still there to your business, ’ is very people good advice, in the
have are a great many busi¬
world who stick to; no and regular there and others profitable who
ness to are axe
following a lino of business « hicli is manifest¬
ly nnsuited to them. Now, when such is the
case, you had better write to B. F. Johnson &
Co., Riohmond. Va„ and seo if helpod they cannot
give you a pointer. and They along have the a to great for¬
many men women way
tune, and now stand ready to assist you, too.
What do vou chew ?
“LUCY HINTON!”
Why? is the best I find.
Becauso it can
Who makes it ?
T. C. Williams Co., Richmond, Ya.
Who sells it ?
All dealers.
How can I recognize it ?
The name Lucy Hinton is on every plug.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Eye-water. Druggists-oil at 35c.per bottle
to 6mokersof “ Tan -
Vigor and Vitality
Are quickly given to every part of the body by
Hood’s Sarsaparilla. That tired feeling Is entirely
overcome. The blood Is purified, enriched and
vitalized, and carries health Instead of disease to
every organ. The stomach Is toned and strength¬
ened, tho appetite restored. The kidneys and liver
aro roused and Invigorated. The brain Is refreshed,
the nerves strengthened. The whole system is built
up by Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
“I was all run down and unfit for business. I
was induced to take a bottle of Hood’s Sarsaparilla,
and it built me right up so that I was soon able to
resume work. I recommend it to all.”—D. W.
Brate, 4 Martin Street, Albany, N. Y.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
by Sold C. by I. HOOD all druggists. & CO., Apothecaries, $1; six for $5. Prepared only |
Lowell, Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
BRYANT &
Book Keeping, Short Hand,
Write fox vafalggvie^ndfuu
Brown's Iron Bitters Is a specific In ell case*
of ewnnip fever .Intermittent fever,and malarl*
of any name. Low decaying marshy vegetable ground, stagnant
pools of water, matter,
changes of climate while suffering malaria. from Brown’s gen¬
eral Iron Bitters debility, all produce all forms. Don’t qui¬
cures use
nine. it creates constipation, produces head¬
ache, and not infrequently rheumatism and)
neuralgia; Brown's Iron Bitters never does. It
will cure them.
In all evils which admit of a remedy, impa-
the tlenoe should miuht be avoided, In removing because the it wastes
time wo use cause.
Indigestion.
A recent attack of indigestion or constipa¬
tion is easily cured if ihe right remedy Is ap¬
plied, t but every medicine except Hamburg
igs is so disgusting to tuste or smell that ct
person proton to let the disease take ItSOOUTM
If the above laxative cannot be obtained. 116
cents. Dose one Fig. Mack Drug (Jo., N. V.
ft
•s Friend”
° MI K™r!M0THER
'tSOO/f JK ar r> CHILD'
BRAQFIELD REGULATOR CO, ATLANTA c*
BOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
I F YOU WISH A
GOOD
REVOLVER
purchase one of the cele- Ts ^
brated SMITH & WESSON ■
arms. The finest small arms t
ever manufactured and the
firBt choice of all experts.
Manufactured in calibreR 32,38 »nd 44-100. sm-
gle or double action. Safety Hammerles* and V223* ___
Target models. Constructed entirely of best qual«
Ity manship wrought and steel, carefully inspected for work¬
durability and stock, they are unrivaled for finish*
accurncy. Do not bo deceived by
cheap often malleable sold for the cast-iron genuine Imitations which
we article and aro not
only unreliable, but dangerous. The SMITH
WESSON Revolvers are all stamped upon the bar¬
rels with firm’s name, address unci dates of patents
and are guaranteed perfect In every detail. In¬
list upon having the genuine article, and if your
dealer below cannot will receive supply prompt you an and order sent to addreg*
careful attention.'
pucaton. jDescrptive catalogue and prices furnished upon an* 4
SMITH & WESSON,
tanaention Springfield, Mat*,
_
ESUTCHER’S
i FLY KILLER
Makes a dean sweep. Every
sheet will kill a quart of flies.
Stops diving buzzing around tickling ears,
at eves, your
nose, skips hard words and se¬
cures Send 25 peace at trifling for expense. sheets
cents 5 to
F. DUTCHKR, St. Albans, Vt.
JONES
IJJ3
PAYS Ti;n THE FREIGHT.
5 Wagon Scale*,
Iron Levers, .Steel Bearings, Brass
Tare Beam and Beam Box lor,
SGO.
> i. Every size Scale. For free price 11st
mention this paper and address
'JOftE:. OF BINGHAMTON
BINGHAMTO N, K. Y. *
Patronize HOME
INDUSTRY!
BUY SOUTHERN-MADE
PRINTING INKS
— FROM—
FRANK J. COHEN, General Agent
23 East Alabama St., ATLANTA, GA.
ttm Plantation Engines
With Self-Contained
RETURN FLUE BOILERS,
1 FOR DRIVING
1 COTTON GINS and MILLS.
Illustrated Pamphlet Free. Addresa
James Leffel A. Co.
5 110 SPRINGFIELD, Liberty OHIO,
or St., New York,
After ALL others
fall, consult
329 N.ISth St.
■ 3 PHILA., PA.
Twenty years’ of continuous practice til In the treat¬
ment and cure the awl c fleets of early
vice, destroying both mind and body. Medicino
and treatment for one month, Five Dollars, sent
securely sealed from observation to any address.
Book on Special Diseases free.
-ex ENGLISH
t-v S4 —- >Ji j Red Tbe only Cross reliable Diamond pill Brand. an*
for stile. Safe
/ j— t(f f/T moml sure. 1.miles, brand, a.k lu red Pruaglet metallic for the Din.
V- Ly Take boxes, leeled
, will! blueribbon. no other. Semlde*
— / L- (NCamps) for particular, aud “ Relief for
Chemical 1.tldlea,” in XludUou letter, by mull. Savte Hulls, Paper. l’u.
Chichester Co., bt^., i’ll
Wtlie One Agent in encli County to
FA ItVlCK’S (VINVo| ? i‘t l I’E jJer! Ne*
way of sharpening gin-. Make your old gins new; keep
yonr new ginsso. No files. Anyone can use it. Commis¬
sions paid agent on all sales in county, whether made
by us or him. 200 machines in use since September last.
Machines and satisfaction guaranteed. Write at once
to ,1. ii. FALLS A: CO., IHcitipliit*, T«mi.
WASHINGTON INFORMATION BUREAU,
COLE A- DEEBl.E, Proprietors,
932 I Street N. VV., Wiisliington, II. C.
General information furniidied.
Correspondence solicited.
MJg SI i§ §5 8 gyMta S3 and V7n 1-ltcy HaV
Kpr Rj |s S B Brega Its cured at home with
g§ out pain. Book of par¬
ti Eg |U3 Man B. ticulars M.WOOLLEY, sent FREE. M.D,
ft Ofilco <£% Whitehall St
Atlanta, (ia.
SfiUSI ij/3 C—A R T—E LOCUTION and
General Culture. Desirable Position.
Ml open to progressive students. All interested
■ H will receive valuable information Free,
oy addressing E. TOURJEE, Boston, Mass.
llTEOTERN W RESERVE SEMINARY AND NORMAL
COLLEGE. W. Farmington, O. 61) years. Both
per sexes, year. wp $101)
ent.
SUS .Safety Rein Holder Co., Holly, Mich,
ALI) W and Ou'lawed accounts collected in all parts
0 f the world. Send stamp for circular, Ac.,to United
.States Collecting Agency, New Haven, Coim.
$25
PEERLESS G* Sold Aro by the Druggists, BEST.
p Fiso's Remeuy fbr Catarrh i. the
> Beau Easiest to Use, and Cheapest
■rrz. A £
Sold by druggists or sent by malL
50c. JL T. liazeltlne, Warren, Pa.
inrrwr « dorse I prescribe Big G and the fully only en.
as
WT Cure* in mS M specific for the certain cure
1 TO 6 days. to® of thi3 disease.
i.«r»n»ed not » G.H.INGRAHAM,M. D.,
tn wStrtsB as. Amsterdam, N. Y.
Mrd only by tho We have sold Big G for
5viu Chemical Co. many years, and’ it haa
Cincinnati,®® Si ven the best of satis-
k I* ction.
Ohio. D. R. DYCHE & CO.,
Xark^ Chicago, Ill.
Trade SI .00. Sold by Druggists.
A.N.U .Thirty, ’89.
Business College
Jbc. AtwU T <5YTTCT7TY ¥ JULIiit. T T? &X* V XT
AO