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SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL.
Gian ■** 3 brick 1 are announced.
About 1500 years ago we entered tho
epoch ot * more genial winter tempera¬
ture.
Common wheat bran, or any kind ot
mill feed Is repommendetl for extinguish¬
ing oil fires.
A reverse of this seasons earth is supposed iu every to
take place upon once
10,500 years. cal¬
In his own laboratory Mr. Auken
culated 30,000,000 of dust particles iu a
cubic inch of air.
Experiments with two straight edges,
separated ut one end by a sheet of paper,
show that light can be seen through a
clean-cut opening of not more than
1-40,000 of au ipch.
In some German telephone offices an
electrically driven clock is attached to
each telephone, which will work as long
as the telephone is oil the hook, and
stops directly it is replaced.
Recent experiments have shown that
in the dog and the cat, as well ns in tho
rabbit, the removal of more than three-
fourths of the liver is uot followed by
serious consequence), and that the or¬
gan regains its weight within thirty-six
days.
Vacciue virus has been cultivated by
a Russian physician, who finds that tho
Attificinlly cultivated is as effective as the
genuine product, while having the ad¬
vantage of absolute freedom from germs
of scrofula, tuberculosis or other dis¬
eases.
Mr. Ilaiy, Curator of the Colombo
Museum, has discovered that carbolized
oil is one of the most perfect preserva¬
tives ot tho colors of fish and other ani¬
mal specimens. The most delicate frogs,
snakes and geckoes retain their evanes¬
cent tiuts wuen kept in it.
The first white enamel factory in thn
United Btates will he located at Dubuque,
Iowa, and the plana for it have just been
received from Germany. The process of
manufacturing these goods is a secret,
and that it may uot be discovered the
building will be constructed without
doors and windows except those opening
in an iuner court.
A French physiologist report* an in¬
teresting experiment in preventive inocu¬
lation for consumption. About eight
months ago he inoculated two monkeys
with the tubercular bacilli of the fowl,
and ufter six mouths they showed no
signs of the disease. These animals and
a third were then inoculated with human
tubercle, with tho result that those first
iuoculated still continue well, while the
third died after a few weeks.
It has been decided to work the Liver¬
pool (England) Elevated Railway by
electricity, using motor cars, instead of
separate locomotives. The line is six
miles long, and the generating station is
being erected near the middle of tho
railway. There are several opening
bridges, and the structure is composed
sntircly of iron and steel, spanning for
the most the existing dock railway,
which will thus be loft free for the goods
traffic of the docks.
Forest vegetation is much richer in
North America than in Europe, and com¬
prises 112 species, of which 170 are na¬
tive to tho Atlantic regiou, 100 to the
Pacific, ten are common to both, forty-
tix to the Rocky Mountain region, and
seventy-four are tropical species near the
coasts of Florida, as against 158 species
in Europe. Six Nortli American specie)
of forest trees—the Judos tree, peraim.
mon, liarkberry, plane tree, hop horn¬
beam and chestnut—are also indigenous
in Europe, all now growiug there natur¬
ally south of the Alps.
Wash Day Comes Once a Year.
In Germany, especially among the
lower classes, it is said, wash day come?
no oftencr than Christmas—onco a year.
A writer says; Tho notion of cleanli¬
ness which prevails umong the better
class of Germans forbids the storing or
accumulation of solid liuen in the dwell¬
ing house, hence the necessity of tho
“schwartz-waschUamraor,” built near by,
where the soiled or unwashed clothes are
living up exposed to the air on poles or
lines. We cannot but commend them
lor this custom, anu it would be well for
those housekeepers to take a hint who
store soiled garments iu the closets of
sleeping-rooms and under the beds. The
humblest German bausfrau does not feel
her poverty if she has an abundance of
linen, and this she will have if possible,
to the exclusion of other things which
we might regard almost as ueedful. She
is rich indeed if Rt the end of six months
or a year she can display long lines hung
with immaculate linen. We can thus
understand how even at this day a chest
of liuen is regarded among the peasantry
as a part of their dower or marriage
portion of the brido. For these wash¬
ings a week is usually taken, and tho
event is regarded as no ordinary one. It
is something of a jubilee in which the
entire family takes part. An American
lady traveling in Germany witnessed ono
of these “frolics,” where four or five
women were washing from one capacious
tub. When asked why they did not
adopt the easier plan of washing weekly,
one of them replied that “they feared
the people might think they had but
two garments apiece.”—New Orleans
Picayune.
Fight Between a Hawk and a Snake.
Mrs. W. P. Lasitter had an unusual
experience a few days ago. As the story
goes she saw a large hawk descend to
the ground. As the hawk did not rise
after a short time she decided to investi¬
gate. On approaching the place the
hawk arose and perched upon a tree
near by. In a few minutes it descended
again. Mrs. Lasitter proceeded to the
place and found that, the hawk had
tackled a large black snake. Its talons
were last in the snake, and the snake so
entwined about the wings and body of
the hawk that the latter could neither
disengage itself from the snake nor rise
with it. Mrs. Lasitter took advantage
of the situation, and arming herself with
a club killed both hawk and snake.—
Ovieda (Fla.) Chroniclr
Salaries of Rulers,
UTie President of the United States rt-
••1 vet $50,000 par annum, or a monthly
•alary of $4,100. flfl. The bhab of Persia,
who has no other employment hundred than the
►upervision of several wives, is
lo the eDj >yment of $30,000,000 income
a year. The Czar ol Russia la paid some¬
thing like $10,000,000 annually. similar The
dignified King of Siam lives on a receives
sum. The renal family of Spa n
$3,000,000 every year, and I alians mike
up a purse of $3,000,000 and more, for
their royalties. Such figures as these
console ihe British people slightly, for
their annual ou lay, under Victoria the and specific her
laws, of $2,015,000, on
numerous proge iy. That reform pirate of
the sea*, the Multan of Morocc >, has an
Annua! allowance of $2 500,000, and the
Mikado of Japan, whom we have all seen
across the footlights, receives $2,300,000.
The impotent royalty of Egypt dr.iwa
$1,575,000 Iron the substance of that
tax-ridden land; while the HobcnzoHens
content themselves with a yearly tribute
of $1,125,000 from the Prussian empire. Zanzi¬
Even the Suit in of col ton-clouted
bar pockets a million a year; and $700,-
O00 are wrung from tho Saxons of Sax¬
ony. Portugal and Sweden and each spend
$000,000 on their kings; the petty
princelings of Schwaizburir Soudcrehau-
sen arc paid $150,000. France allows
her chief magistrate only $200,000; but
naked little Hayti gives her Switzerland’s presidential
crowd $240,000 annually.
president has a salary of only $8,000 a
year. The governor genrrals of both
Canada and Victoria receive $10,000
yearly, while the like luoctionary in
India has $200,000.
Didn’t Work Right.
De Smoker—“Do you know, my dear,
an em n< nt seientist has discovered that
tobacco arrests the development of bac-
tcrin. ”
Wife—“Does it, really? You wou’dn’t
want your little wifle to be eaten up by
those horrid bacteria, would you, my
detr? Wtiere’s your other pipe?”—New
York Weekly.
wv
tj
ISP IK
m
V
Officer A. Ji. lira ley
of tho Fall River Police,
It highly gratified with Hood's Sarsaparilla. He was
badly run down, had no appetite, what he did eat
caused distress and he felt «
Tired all the Time
A few bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla effected a mar*
relous change. The distress ly the stomach Is en¬
tirely gone, he feels 1 ke a new man and can eat any
thing with old-time relish. For all of w hich he
thanks and cordldally recommends Hood’s Sarsa*
par 11 lu. It is very important that in the mouths of
March
April May
The blood should be thoroughly purified and the sys¬
tem be given strength to withstand the debilitating
effect of the changing season. For this purpose
Hood's Sarsaparilla possesses peculiar medicinal
powers and it is the
Best Spring Medicine
The following, just received, demonstrate* it*
wonderful blood-purifying pow ers:
“C. 1. Hood A Co., Lowell, Mass.
"Gentlemen: I have bad salt rheum for a num¬
ber of years, and for the past year ouo of my legs,
from badly. the knee I took down, blood has medicine boon broken for long out t very with
a me
no good results, and was at one time obliged to
Walk With Crutches
I finally concluded to try Hood's Sarsaparilla, and
before I had taken one bottle the improvement was
mi marked that I continued until I had taken thre#
bottles,and am now- better than I have been In years.
The lnllanimnlion has nil left my leg and it Is
entirely healed. I have had such benefit from
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
that I roneludeU to write this voluntary statement.-
F. J. TsarLi, Ridgeway, Mich.
Hood’s I’illa cure all Diver liis.
“German
Syrup”
Justice of the Peace, George Wil¬
kinson, of Lowville, Murray Co.,
Minn., makes a deposition concern¬
ing a severe cold. Listen to it. “In
the Spring of 1888 , through ex¬
posure I contracted a very severe
cold that settled on my lungs. This
was accompanied by excessive night
sweats. One bottle of Boschee’s
German Syrup broke up the cold,
night sweats, and all and left me
in a good, healthy condition. I can
give German Syrup my mosteamest
commendation.”
tea, %EJ5£J t;
ml S r j A '
;
.
I o u
w^tb Pastes, Enamels, and and Pnlnt* burn off. which stain
tl»# The hands, Rising injure Sun the Stove iron, Polish is Brilliant, Odor¬
less. Durable, and tho consumer pays for no tin
or glass package with every purchase.
Ely's Cream Balm
quickly cures eploinmctc;
COLD in HEAD r w
l runt |
Apply Bslm into Mch nostril.
*M reps. . M Warren St.^N.Y.
SELECT SIFTINGS. AN
Palmistry Is once more having a vogue.
Glass is now used as a filling lor teeth.
A Rio Grande engineer recently shot a
wildcat near New Castle, Col., from the
cab of hia engine.
A Pennsylvania insane-asylum super¬
intendent reports that eight out of every
ten of his inmates write verse9.
Dom Pedro de Valdivia, the first
Governor of Chile, founded Santiago,
its capital, February 12, 1541.
Sheet iron kites, to enable a vessel
when in distress during a storm to com¬
municate with the shore, have been sug¬
gested.
A Lynn (Mass.) man is the owner of
the drum which beat time for the Mas¬
sachusetts Sixth on its famous march
through Baltimore, Mi.
The first Russian newspaper was pub¬
lished in 1703. Peter tho Great took a
personal part in its editorial composition
and in correcting proofs.
It is the custom in Brooklyn, N. Y.,
for physicians to render services to
priests ami to attend them professionally
without making any charge.
An electrical pool table has been made
in which contact buttons are so arranged
in front of the pockets that when a ball
rolls in it strikes them, and the point
made is recorded on an enunciator.
The size and growth of the city ol
London is shown by the mileage of the
streets. Should they be placed together
they would measure about 2500 miles, or
nearly the distance across the Atlaatic
Ocean.
The public schools in Dundee, Scot¬
land, have decided to make the highland
fling and the strathspey of Tullochgorum
and other forms of dancing part af the
curriculum. Education in dancing, how¬
ever, will require an extra fee, and will
therefore be optional.
There is grim humor in ono clause in
the will of the late Solomon Abrams, of
Boston, Mass. Alter making a number
of charitable bequests the testator re¬
marks: “I remember all my cousins,
aunts, uncles and grandfathers, but I
give them notihng.”
There is a new wind instrument, the
“pedal clarinet.” It is an octave below
the bas9 clarionet, and produces the
lowest note obtained by auy instrument
except the organ. With a range of three
octaves it has a much pleasanter tone
than the double bassoon.
It is announced that a Welshman has
perfected a sewing machine, by which
the thread is supplied directly from two
ordinary spools, and sews through the
assistance of a rotary looper. By shuttle means
of this arrangement the old style
or bobbin is done away witb.
It was an odd coincidence that Cardi¬
nals Manning and Siineoni were elevated
to their highest rank in the Church the
same day and died on the same day.
What is more, the last official letter
penned by the English Cardinal was by
chance addressed to his Vatican con¬
frere, the late Prefect of the Propaganda.
An inquisitive man walked into the
Oakland, Me., ax factory not long ago,
and when passing a steam punch, for?" asked
suddenly, “What's that hole At
the same time he stuck his finger into the
hole. The punch wasn't exactly planned
for cutting off fingers, but it rose to the
occasion and the finger dropped.
Will New York Be Eugulfed?
According to the figures of Professoi
W. J. McGee, it is ouly n question of
time when the slow b.ut never-ceasing
inroads of the ocean will engulf many
populous cities of the Atlantic seaboard,
and perhaps whole States. He says:
“There is a broad lowland stretch¬
ing from Sandy Hook to Cape Henry,
and another washed by Mississippi
Sound, upon which the sea is gradually
but slowly and surely encroaching. They
are wane-fashioned plains, but recently
wrested from the ocean, and now old
Ocean again reclaims its own. Already
its octopus arms have seized the low¬
lands in their horrid embrace, and day
by dty, month by month, year by year,
generation by generation, the grasp is
tightening, the monster creeping further
and further inland. Each average year
the watermark advances a rod. The
seaside cottage, with a broad lawn be¬
fore it, has an ‘expectation of life’ of a
decade or a generation, but the cottage
at the verge of the cliff may go in a year,
and must go in a lustrum, unless human
devices outwit and overpower the waves.
On most other Eastern and Southern
coasts the waves are also encroaching,
but their progress is slower. But the
ocean's power is too great for puny man
to oppose successfully. What, then, is
he to do? In ray opinion, he can only
temporarily provide against it, and then
slowly retreat before the invasion. St.
Louis Republic.
Preparation of Rice.
The milling of rice, briefly stated,em¬
braces the following processes:
1. The “screening” or second thrash-
ing gives the rough rice or “paddy” de¬
signed to remove trash, stalks and for¬
eign particles.
2. The removal ot the outer husk by
the “millingstones.”
3. The separation of the chaff and
other substances by the “screen blower"
and “chaff fan.”
4. The removal of the yellow cuticle
of the grain by pestling iu mortars,which
is the most laborious and expensive of
the several processes.
5. The separation of the rice bran
from the rice grain by sifting, and the
separation of the small and large grain
of rice by the “brush screen.”
6. Polishing, which is accomplished
by a horizontal revolving drum, covered
with leather and surmounted by a cylin¬
der of wire gauze.
The friction by the constant rubbing
of the grains of rice agaiDst each other
and ag&inst the drum produces the “rice
polish,” otherwise called rice dust or rice
fiour, which is not rice braD, but a part
of the grain itself worn by attrition.—
Scientific American.
Some Sensible Advice.
That you can mike your own hand
grenade-, to be used in cste of fire, by
filling old quart bottle* with the follow¬
ing: Chloride of lime, crude, twenty
parts; emmon salt, fiTe part*; water,
seventy-five p arts. Those who have con-
veoient hand pumps may keep this solu
tion handy and throw it with the pump.
That you can clean your brass kettle
with a solution of oxalic acid in wa er.
Apply with fltnnil, wash off and polish
with chamois skin.
That, if you drop acid on vour clothes,
the immediate application of ammonia
will destroy the effect.
That you can keep butter and milk
fresh a long time in warm weather with¬
out ic wrapping a large it poiU9 the pot in a
wet cloth and inverting over butter
or mi k The external evaporation cools
the interior.
That you can make your own white
wine vinegar by adding five gallons of
rainwater to ten pounds of mashed rai¬
sins and letting it stand in a warm place
for a month.
That a water bottle, the interior of
which has be vme coated with carbonate
of lime from hird water, may be cleaned
by washing in water in which a tea-
spoonful of spirits of salts has been dis¬
solved. Rinse well before using.
That citric acid will remove ink stains.
That copper may be cleaned by adding
A little solution of bichromate of pota-h be
to dilu ed nitric acid. This should
used with care.
That hot water used in making a
sponge rake will make it mucii whiter.
Cold water produces a yellow cake.
That a little borax or soda in the dish
water makes blighter tinware and is
better than soap.
That jelly will not mold if a thin layer
of paper dipped in the white of an egg
is laid upon the top.
That half a teaspoonful of sugar gives
a Houseket fine fltvor to brown gravy.—Good
ping.
A Natural Result.
Friend—“I see you are still giving
vsBt sums to charity. If you nothing keep on
much longer you will have to
leave your relatives.”
R ch Man (who is weary of reading
about will contests)—“They know.”—New can apply York to
the charities, you
Weekly.
Fairly Entitled.
Pension Agent—“Want a pension?
Certain y, my dear sir. What are you
suffering from?”
Applicant—“Brain strain.”
“Too bad. What caused it?”
“Thinking up ways to avoid the draft. ”
—New York Weekly.
8100 Reward. 8100.
The renders of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is at least one dreaded disease
that science lias been able to cure in all its
etaifes. and that is catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure now known to
stitutional the medical disease, fraternity. Catarrh constitutional being a con¬
treatment. Hall’s Catarrh requires Cure a is taken in¬
ternally, acting directly upon the blood and
stroying mucous surfaces the foundation of the system, of the disease, thereby and de¬
giving the patient strength by building up the
constitution and assisting nature in doing its
work. The proprietors have so much faith in
its curative powers that they offer One Hun-
ired Dollars for any ease that it fails to cure.
Send for list of testimonials. Address
&T Sold by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
Druggists, 75c.
Books are the best things, well read ; abused
among the worst.
Ladies nee Tn- n tontr, or children who
warn building up, should take Brown's lion
Bitters, rt is pleasant to take, cures Malaria,
Indigestion, Bilio ".ness and Liver Com¬
plaints , makes the Blood rich and pure.
If yon take care of your character, your
reputation wi l takecareof itself.
Advice to Women
If you would protect Profuse,'Scanty, yourself
from Painful,
Suppressed or Irregular Men¬
struation you must use
BRADFIELD’S
FEMALE
REGULATOR
Cartbrsville, members April 26,1886. of
This will certify that two my
being treated without benoflt cured by by physicians, bottle
were Bradfletd’a at length completely I'omale negulator. one Us
of is truly wonderful. J. W. Strange.
effect
Boot to " WOMAN ” mailed FREE, which contains
valuable Information on nil feniftlc disc&^cs.
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.,
ATLANTA, GA.
MOB SALE BY ALL DBUOaiSTS.
Kennedy’s
MedicalDiscovery Takes hold in this order;
liver, Bowels,
Kidneys, Inside Skin,
Outside Skin,
Driving everything before it that ought to r - out.
You know whether
you need it or not
Sold by every' druggist, and manufactured by
DONALD KENNEDY,
ROXBIRY, MASS.
• ® q • « m
A torpid liver Is the source ol dyspep. @
* sla, sick headache, constipat ion. piles, v
bilious fever, ehlllsand jamidlee.
• l!i!!i Im™ ® ©
storing It to healthy action. 25cts.
ENSIONS—Due all SOLDIERS! k din-
Write it 2 Fee L^ws. for iu A. ore* W. se. McCORMcK 26pears experience. &
for £
SONS* Washington, D. C. Cincinnati. O .
$65 A J1UNTH foriBright louug Men or
Ladle? In each county. Address P. W.
ZIEGLER & CO.. Phila.. Pa.
OPIUMSSS£fH
** Everybody’* ” Idea.
Pint Boj—“Why dc03 everybody look
•o glum?” Boy—“’Cause there ain’t goiu’
Second
to be no war.”
First Boy—“Did everybody wont to go
to war?”
Second Boy—“No; everybody wanted
to at«y at home an’ make money while
the war wag goin’on.”—Street & Smith’s
Good News.
The Only One Ever Printed.
CAN YOU FIND THE WORD?
There is a 3 inch dl-play adver Dement tr.
this paper, this >teelt, which lias no two words
a!' c except one word. Tue same is true o:
each new one app-arinx each wees, from The
•tr* Mai ler .Medicine t 'o. This house p aces a
‘‘Crescent" on everythin'? they make»n<l pub-
li-h. Loo t tor It, send them I he li t me of I he
word and they nil. return you B iok, iii.alti
FUL LUIIOUUAI-MS Or.SAMI-i.KS FREE.
Most peop’e would Ktt'-c.-ed in f-rnall tli'ngf,
if they were uot troubled with great ambi¬
tions.
_________
Many persons are broken down from over¬ Bit¬
work or hou e 10 W cares. Brown’s Iron
ters rebui ds the system, and ai l- digestion, malaria. le- A
move* excess of bile, cures
spendid tonic for women and children.
Prosperity is no ju«t scale ; adversity is the
oitly balance to weigh friends.
"1 have in my employ a man who has been
a viciim of periodic headaches for years, has
tried all kindsot Ireatm.-nt, and I have tried
variou rem-dies on him. Your Bradycrotine
he Ds him more tban anything eve,-did." O.
D. Kingsley, M.D., White Plains, N. Y. 50 cts
FITS stopped free by I)h. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first day’s
use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and Phila.. $2 trial Pa-
Lottie free. Or. Kline. 931 Arch St..
FoRThBOAT DISEASES, COUGHS, COLDS, “Brown’s etc.,
effectual relief is lound in tic-use of
Bronchial Troches.” Price 25 cts. Sold only
in boxes.
Beecham’s Pills cure sick heada-he, dis¬
ordered liver and act like magic on the vital
oi gang. For . ale by alt drugg.sts.
_ ___
If afflicted with sore eyes use sell Ur. Wnac Thomp- bottle.
sonV Eve-water.Druggists at 25 • per
Zmk
h>
t
•J
ONE ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acts
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys-
tem effectually, dispels colds, head-
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Svrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro¬
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac¬
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial fc its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable qualities substances, commend its it
many excellent
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known. 59o
Syrup of Figs is for sale in
and $1 bottles by all leading drug¬
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes * Do not accept any
to try it
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO
SAN FRANCISCO. CAL. *-*•
LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK.
* Si P A> N m!eI A ^r L fu S d«:
J purify the blood, are safe andef-Z
# factual. The best for general family*
a Constipation, medicine known Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Foul# *
2 Breath, Headache, Mental Heartburn, Depression, Loss*
of Appetite, 0
Painful Digestion, Pimples, Sallow# and#
• _ Complexion, Tired Feeling,
HS&V.KSSM
1
PISO’S CURE FOR
Consumptives and people
who have weak lungs or Asth-
ma. should use 1 ’iso’sCure for
1 Consumption. It has eared
thousand!, ft has bad not Injnr-
ed one. lt Is not to take.
It is the best cough syrup.
Sold everywhere. *Se.
CONSUMPTION.
FflUji * fa JUST OUT 2ESS
■II l * « WATCHES, Jewelev and
7 ^wTrfcSSentFree. Very large assortment.
V > CHA8. I.UBRECHT, New York,
l£STi*lJSHED 1C-jo. > 135 Pearl St.
m
SWEET GUM & MULLEIN
CUREIS,
AND ALL LUNG TROUBLES
told by ail dealers. Accept no substitute.
THECOSTISTHESAME.
ft A ■LWocn PlCKETj.
IS
a It
B.r; 13 **
[-ji n ' f qK tEARsr Mag m m
The Hartman Steel Picket Fence
Costs no more than an ordinary clumsy Fence wood artistic picket affair that obstruct* the grounds new and will rot of fail
apart in a short tune. The Hartman Is in design, protect! the w thout conoeallns
them and is practically everlasting. ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE WITH PRICES AND TJUTt
UQKIALS XaILi D FREE. HAUTMAN MFC,. CO., Beaver Falls, Pa.
SOUTHhPN SALES AGENCY, 51 and 55 £. Forsyth Street, Atlanta, 0a,
v!
vz*.
rf] m •3
Nl
1 V V7 I ID
COPYRIGHT 1891
Wound up
— the man or woman who’s “run¬
down.” Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med¬
ical Discovery sets the wheels health¬ going.
It starts the torpid liver enriches into tho
ful action, purifies and and strength¬
blood, cleanses, repairs, and health
ens the system, restores
and vigor. tonic, As it®ets an appetizing, work re¬ all
storative at
the processes of digestion and nu¬
trition, and builds up flesh and
strength.
For all scrofulous humors and
blood-taints, Lung-scrofula), and even Consump¬ if taken
tion (or
in time, it’s a positive remedy.
Unlike the sarsaparillas, which
claim to be good for the blood in
March, April, and May, “ Golden
Medical Discovery” works equally
well at all seasons.
Unlike other blood-purifiers, too,
it’s guaranteed to benefit or cure,
in every case, or your money, is re¬
turned.
On these terms, it’s the cheapest.
T OU pay Only for the good you get.
J} ut jt’s the best — Or it Couldn’t b«
sold so.
_
*Y s
m 6-
'
AT WHO
CCHERRY
\Bimns
MEDICINAL
.•USE
PEii L J
__
RELIEVES all stomach Distress.
REMOVES Nausea, Ben so of Fullness,
< i? 1 ,CiSTI p ^»
nrwi.ir 2 pctv^dc 1 . ^ 1 ? 8 «i
ST waLis^^oe^imI*^ ^
DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO.. St. Louis. Mo.
GOLD MEDAL^PARIS, 187a
__ W. BAKER & CO.’S
m. Breakfast Cocoa
from which the excess of oil
has been removed,
Js absolutely pure and
it is soluble.
FnWi No Chemicals
1 i are used in its prepare ion. It
, l\
I jl has more than three times the
strength of Cocoa mixed with
ft | Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar,
and is therefore far more cco-
|1 'jScentacvp. Domical, costing It is delicious, less than on*
nour-
H iahing, strengthening, easily
_ admirably adapted for invalids
digested, and
aa well as for per sons in he alth.
Sold bjr Grocers ev erywhere.
W. BAKER & GO., Dorchester, Hast.
W bicb Piano?
Decide that after trying the
& POND. You can
try them; - we’ll tell you what «
dealer can show them to you,
or we ’ n send on approval for at our in¬
cwn expense. Write
formation.
Iver? & Pood
Piano Company, Boston.
KING COTTON
Buy or tell your Cotton on JOHES
«* *K | ■ 5-Ton NOT CHEAPEST Cotton BUT 8cale. BEST.
19 rn 11 |i For terms lUnia
▼ W JOJTES OF BIN0HAKT05, Y.
BINGHAMTON. N.
A. N. U Eleven, '92,