Newspaper Page Text
1
H. L. Boone & Co.,
HARDWARE
Stovas, Mill Supplies,
Valdosta. Ga.
'*®1 tA
SaYannab, Florida and Western
HUB OiRD IN EFFECT MAT (5, 1837.
‘r«Ini on mil road niU r.m Jiily
u follows I
Wist India Fast Mall.
BEAD DOW*. head
▼oaara Lv Savannah Ar 12 06 p zn
12S0ptn Ur.,,.Jacksonville....Lv 7 00am
4 40 p m Lv Sanford Lv 115 a ro
900pm Ar Tampa Lv 8 00am
Plant Sttamshlp Una.
SSISJS! T. t *■ .Tnmpa...Ar {£.■»»»
SBfcjSl *..*****, J*
jjElJS!
, Pullman Buffet Cara to and from New York
and Tampa.
I Niw Orlians Exprsss.
T Of am Lv Savannah Ar 7 58 pm
8 42 am Lv /crap Ar 616 pm
910am Ar.......\Vayoro— Lv COS pm
1126 am Ar Callahan Lv 2 47 pm
13 noon Ar ..... Jacksonville Lv 2 05 pm
7 06 am Lv Jackaonvi.le ..Ar 7 35 pin
a Lv Waycic
.*...Ar 4 40 pm
.1101 pm Lv Valdosta Lv 2 5G pm
12 84 pm Lv Quitman Lv 2 23 pm
113 r-m Ar Tliomaaville.... .Lv 1 45 pm
. .B tin bridge Lv 11 25 a
"• 04 pm Ar... .GnatUhoochee... .Lv 11 SO am
Pullman buffet Oirs to and from Jackson
ville and New York, to and from Waycrosa and
New Orleans via Peniac-di.
East Florida Express.
I SO pm Lv Savannah Ar 12 06 am
3 20 pm Lv.. JtfMiip Lv 10 32 am
4 40 pm Ar Waycroaa Lv 9 23 n
V 85 pm Ar...
416 pm Lv..
. Jacksmivi le..
..Lv 7 00am
..Ar 915am
20 pm Lv..
831 pm Ar..
....WsycroM...
.. ..Dupont
...Ar 6 35am
. Lv 53)am
3 25pm Lv..
1 45 pm Lv..
.. Gainesville...
..Ar 10 32 am
• 65 pm Lv..
...Ar 7 10am
S 40 pm Lv Dupont Ar 6 25 am
10 65 pm Ar Tkomanviil • Lv 3 25 am
1 22 am Ar ’. Albany. Lv 125 am
Pullman buffet cart to and from Jackson
ville and SU Louis viaThomasvf le and Albany,
Montgomery, Nashville.
Albany Exprsss.
785pmLv Savannah......Ar 610am
10 05 pm Lv Jeaup Lv 3 20 am
12 40 am Ar Way cross Lv 12 10 am
CSOsm Ar...
BOO pm Lv...
...Ar 5 30am
105 si
m Lv ..
n Ar...
Dupont
...Lv 10 05 pm
7 10 m
m Ar ..
... Live Oak....
10 30 ai
in Ar...
.. Oiiiusville...
... Lv 3 45 pm
10 45 ai
n Ar...
....Lake Oily
...Lv 3 25pm
2 65am Lv.... Dupont ..Ar 9 35 pm
6 30 am Ar Thontaavide Lv 7 00 pm
11 40 am Ar i.A'.laiiy.. .* Lv 4 00 pm
Stops at sll reinlar atnlinna. Pullman buf
fet sleep! us cars to and from Jacksonville and
i Bartow snd Sat-
Thomasvllla Express.
• 05 a m Lv Waycroas Ar 700 p m
10 25 a m A" Tbomaavillc.... Lv 2 15 p m
Slops at all regnlir and flag stations.
WB. P. HARDEE,
Gcn’L Pass. An**
R. G. FLEMINQ, Superintendent.
B ir/uhstswic
AND WESTERN
RAILROAD.
TY TY ROUTE.
n/ly Miles Shorter Than any Other
Houle Between Way cross
and Albany.
On and after Sunday, Hay 15th, 1837, pass
enger trains will run as follows;
CENTRAL STANDARD TIME.
FOR THE WEST, NORTH AND SOUTH.
Brunswick, via B A W... .lv 6 00 am 8 03 pm
Pylea’ Marsh lv *6 27 am *8 81 pm
Jamaica lv 6 54 am 9 00 pm
Wayneaville .lv 7 32 am 9 40 pm
Hoboken lv 8 29 sui 10 40 pm
tSchlattervllle lv 8 41 am *10 55 pm
Waycrosa ar 9 05 am 11 25 pm
Jacksonville, vis 8. F. <k >V lv 7 00 am 9 00 pm
Callahan lv 7 37 am 9 45 pm
Charleston ...lv SOJara 6 10am
Savannah lv 7 06 am 130 pm
W5yci
11 55 pm
BA W lv 1000
Pearson Iv 1115 am
iha lv 12 30 pm 2 07
lv 2 03 pm 8 30
Alapal
Tyiy s „,_.
Sumner............ lv 218pm
Willingham ..lv 2 44 pm
Davis... Iv 800pm
Albany ar 3 25 pm 5 00
Columbus
Atlanta.!! *. t
Marietta, via W. A A.... i
910 a
Louisville** via L AN... ar CSOara
Cincinnati, viaCin. So.ar 6 40 am
FROM THE WEST, NORTH AND SOUTH.
Mail. Express.
Cincinnati, via Gin. 8o.. .lv 9 00 pm
LonisTille, via LA N. lv 8 45 pm
Oiattanooga,riaW. A A., lv 8 05 am
Marietta^ lv 12 53pm
2 00 pm
.6 00 pm
Atlanta, viaC. R. R. lv
Albany. visBAW
It 11(0 am 10 05 pm
Sumner
lv 12 13 pm 1113 pm
lv 12 32 pm 1123 pm
lv 211pm 1243am
Waycroas.
ar 4 49 pm S 00 am
Savannah, viaS. F,4W.
ar 7 58 pm 12 Ofi am
Callahan.. via 8 F A W
Jacksonville
.ar 6 57 pm 5 25 am
ar 7 35 pm 615 am
JacksonviUe, viaSFAWlv 2 05 pm 7 00 am
Callahan lv 2 47 pm 737 ~
AN ay cross, via.
SchUtterrille
via BA W. lv 505pm 1000a
The mail train stops at aUB. A W. stations.
Cocmectiona made at Wav cross to and from
all points on Savannah, Florida A Western
BaU way. *
Pullman Palace Sleeping and Mann Boudoir
sleeping cars upon Jacksonville and Cincinnati
^itntrclise ear through to Chattanooga.
The only line running sleeper to Cincinnati
Via Queen and Crescent Route. ■ _
F. W. ANGIEB, A. G. P. A.
j. a. McDuffie, g.p.a.
A. JL GADDI& Y. P. A G. M.
FARM AND GARDEN.
ThoFwjh and Frequent Cultivation.
’The advantages of thorough and fre
quent cultivation are apparent under all
circumstances. In dry weather the fine,
loose soil makes a non-conducting cov
ering which preserves the subsoil moist
and prevents injury tothe plants; in wet
weather it absorbs and holds the rain
which would otherwise ran off without
doing all the good it might. Two or
three inches of fine, pulverized soil is a
mulch, and. holding a large quantity of
air among its particles, cools the lower
•oil and prevents excessive evaporation.
When a rain comes, then is the time to
run the cultivator through the crops and
loosen the crust which is apt to form the
first hot day afterward. In a dry time
the evaporation from the soil is prevented
by frequent stirring of the surface and
the fine porous layer at every change from
hot to cool and from cool to hot again has
currents of air passing in and out as the
expansion and contraction alternates,
with the more decaying vegetable matter
in the soil, the more moisture is absorbed
from the night dews and the more oxida
tion and vitrification . goes on as this
moisture and lu-at are absorbed by the
porous surface. Never mind how clean
and clear of weeds the soil may be; kill
ing weeds is only a side issue in the work
of summer cultivation of crops.—Nne
Tori Times.
Poultry Hints.
Confine the old hen in a coop placed
near the garden, and see what havoc the
chicks will make among the insects.
Work quietly and gently among your
fowls. Never allow them to become
frightened. Never allow a strange dog
on the place.
Charcoal lins an important cleaning
influence on the fowl’s system, and is es
pecially valuable when fed to the laying
hens during the winter season.
Dampness is fatal to young turkeys, and
canses greater loss than anything else.
The essentials to success are nitrogenous
food, warmth, dryness and frequent feed
ing.
It is not so much the little red mitea in
the hen-house that do the damage to
poultry as it is the large gray body-lice,
which work on the heads and necks.
Look closely for them, as they do not
leave the body of the fowls. The slee]
disease in chicks, drooping spirits in
hens and failure to lay, though well fed
and in apparent health, may be traced to
the large lice on hens.
Ducklings grow faster than chicks, and
with proper care are ready for market at
the age of from eight to ten weeks. The
eggs hatch well, requiring no turning,
and are thirty-one days in hatching.
They require much the same food as
thicks, but require more meat, as their
nature demands fresh and raw articles
mostly. They do not require water until
they are well feathered, except for drink
ing, nor must they even get wet.—Cm*
cinnati Commercial-Gazette. _
Fight ini;Poultry Vermin In Summer
Frequently tho most difficult work of
the poultryman is that of ridding the
premises of vermin. Most persons do
not become aware of the presence of
vermin until tho little red mites are seen
in myriads. These can easily be destroyed
by using proper methods. The great
scourge of poultry is not the mites, but
the large body-louse that hides at the
base of the feathers, on the head and neck.
As they are only found there on the fowls,
au examination of the quarters does not
reveal them, when they may be busily at
work on the birds. When the hens seem
to droop without apparent cause, the
chances are that a close examination on
their heads and necks will reveal swarms
of these lice. Little chicks, especially
those that feather very rapidly, such as
Dorkings, Games, ami Leghorns, will
soon succumb to large lice, and often the
cause will be ascribed to something else.
To prevent lice on fowls, the best
thing is the dust-bath, which roust con
sist of fine dry c lay or coal ashes. If the
quarters are kept clean, the hens will
E revent the attacks of lice by dusting,
ut when ohee the lice put in an appear
ance, the poultryman is compelled to
take active measures, as the lice must be
fought until not a single one remains.
Kerosene must not be used on the bodies
of the bens, as it will sometimes kill
them. For the large body lice, first
grease the heads, necks, and vents with
a mixture made by adding a teaspoonful
of crude petroleum to every gill of lard.
Use it warm, so it will spread well. Then
dust the hens well with Californian or
Persian Insect Powder. Repeat this every
third day, and dust every portion of tte
body, but do not grease the body—only
the head, neck and vent.—American Agri
culturist.
Peach Trees and Peaches.
In a special report made by J. M.
White to the New Jersey State experi
ment station are given in detail investi
gations concerning peach yellows and
the treatment of the trees in New Jersey
by some of the more prominent growers.
Numbered with those who related their
experiences for this report is Dr. Henry
Race, of Pittstown, Hunterdon County,
who has used potash salt and bone for
the last six years. He has found that
when trees bear an excessively large crop
they are liable to an unhealthy appear
ance. The leaves turn yellow, small
reddish shoots start up from the large
branches near the trunk, and the wood
soon becomes of a dark brownish color.
Whether these symptoms represent the
specific disease called the “yellows’* or
not, Dr. Race does not pretend to say,
but claims that muriate of potash and
superphosphate of lime, applied as soon
as the crop is gathered, in the quantity
of four hundred or five hundred pounds
to the acre, with good cultivation and
pruning, will prevent this premature de
cay or arrest it if just commenced. If
the fertilizer is withheld till the wood
has become dark brown, its applicati
may improve the appearance of the tree,
but it will never be healthy and vigorous
again.
T. E. Hunt, of Greenwich, considers it
of great inqiortance that only healthy
trees be set out and also that the orchard
be well culti vated and cleared of briers.
He works his orchard until July, plough-
ing.it once and then doing the work with
a wheel or Acme harrow. He fertilizes
with muriate of potash and bone, using
two hundred pounds of potash and three
hundred pon nds of bone to the acre. This
orchard occupies ten acres and tho ma
jority of the trees are in good con
dition.
Isaac M. Smally, of Roadstown, has
been using kainit aud bone for five years
with satisfactory results. He has 3,500
trees set on corn ground, and he crops
among his trees with corn the first two
years, practising clean cultivation and
removing all briars "whenever these ap
pear. He fertilizes with kainit and bone,
using three hundred pounds of each per
acre, applied in early spring, and has n
yellows.
Wm. Redmond, of Jametburg, has 10,
000 trees from two to fourteen years old
and in healthy condition. Peaches from
the old treesi took the first premium at
the Monmouth Fair last season. Mr.
Redmond fertilizes With yard manure
and all the ashes he can. procure and
practices thorough cultivation, believing
good cultivation equal to manure. He
carefully selects his buds from healthy
trees in order to secure healthy stock to
begin with, which he considers’of the
utmost importance. His soil varies,some
being sandy and gravelly and some clay
loam, but all well drained and rolling,
with a clay sub-soil.
Messrs. Culver and Blew. South River,
!mve 4,000 trees, many of which are thir
teen years old, on sandy, gravelly loam,
with clay sub-soil and rolling surface.
They have fertilized with bone and lime.
Their practice is to row buckwheat in their
orchards the first two years, and after
ward to cultivate without any crop,
ploughing very shallow twice in the sea
son. Their orchards have produced fine
fruit, being fairly remunerative, and the
majority of the tiees are now in very
good conition.
From the experience and practice of
the most successful peach-growers, Mr.
White closes his report with the following
conclusions, viz.; That for successful
peach culture the soil must be adapted to
the development of the tree and fruit,
properly located and drained. Then
acting upon the principle that it is better
to prevent than to cure disease, perfectly
healthy trees should be selected for
planting, and after being planted they
should be thoroughly cultivated, judi
ciously pruned and well nourished with
the proper amount of food best suited to
their healthy growth and productiveness.
—New York World.
Farm and Garden Notes.
As a rule, the best quality and the
best yield go hand in band.
Employ extra help /or tho kitchen as
well as the field during harvest.
Give breeding cows the run of a clover
field all through the summer if you can.
Stable manure, says Professor Chamber
lain, of Iowa, is the beat fertilizer on
earth.
Poultry thrives in orchards aud do the
orchards much good, for they kill many
insects.
The Crown Prince of Germany sells
1,000 quarts of milk daily from his dairy
farm near Beilin.
Cultivation should be more aud more
shallow as corn increases in size, says an
Ohio Experiment Station report.
The swine breeders of Iowa have
come to look upon white clover as an ex
cellent summer pasturage for hogs.
Most farmers can keep a few hives of
bees to advantage. Honey, like fruit,
should be found on the farmer's table
The Farmers' Club Journal says: “The
rock which wrecks many a breeder of
swine is a desire to breed too young.*’
Keep the hoe moving; it will not only
kill the weeds, but render the soil mel
low, and thus promote rapid growth to
the crops.
Prof. Morrow says: “Cut hay green.
Nearly all grasses loose value as they be
come fully matured, some become com
paratively worthless.*’
When the mere fact of a dam being a
registered animal makes a difference of
$200 to $500 in her progeny, it is the
height of folly to raise scrub stock.
When working your corn when the
ground is dry, do most of the work in
the early part of the day and dress the
W8 near the stalks, removing clods.
To have stock on your farm which will
sell at high prices, breed a good grade
filly, sired by a registered draft horse or
trotter, while the mare is young and
strong.
A successful horse breeder says that
l animal needs as much feed the first
year ol its life as in any subsequent
year, and that it should be fed a little
at a time, as often as it will eat.
A Bcotish writer say9 always spetk to
a cow as if she were a lady, and speak to
and treat a bull as if he were a gentle
man. Animals possess far more intel
ligence than is usually attributed to
them.
An exchange says churning should
never go any further than to bring the
butter and leave it in granular form.
Butter should be worked but little, and
the only office of that little is to liberate
the brine.
When your horse shies at anything,
make him acquainted with it; let him
smell it, touch it with his sensitive up
per lip and look closely at it. Continue
the lesson and you will cure your horse
of all nervousness.
All stock—particularly work horses—
should have frequent small drinks of
cool, pure water. They require salt at
least once a week. If kept in the stable,
to be “handy” for use, the salt
should never be left uncovered.
who raised 300,000 cabbage ;
last year kept the flea beetles away, lit
poured a gallon of spirits of turpentine
into a barrel of land plaster, and when
the plaster was dampened through he
spread it broadcast over his eabb'ago
patch, applying it when the cabbage was
dry.
Horses at hard work need special care,
both in food and general treatment.
They cannot do hard work on grass
alone and should have a proper ration of
oats. An occasional washing, in addi
tion to currying and brushing, will help
keep the coat in good order. Use a cot
ton sheet to keep off flies. .Water fre
quently and they will not drink to ex
cess. Clean and sweet stables promote
the health of the animals.
A queer Fact Concerning the Eye9.
“There’s lots of advice to be given in
gard to the care of the eyes,” remarked
an oculist the other day, “and so much
has been said and written on the subject
that it scarcely seems worth while to say
anything more. There’s one thing, how
ever, that I’ve never heard mentioned,
and that is in regard to traveling. When
a man is on a train he almost invariably
looks at the landscape through the win
dow nearest him. This is a great mis
take both for physiological and lestbetic
reasons. In traveling at the rate of forty
miles an hour objects present themselves
to the sight in rapid' succession, and in
order to look at'them the pupil of the
eye has to undergo Very rapid changes.
For instance, when yon see a house a
mile away the pupil is dilated; when the
house is 100 yards from you the pupil is
contracted. Now, in traveling, you turn
your attention first to an object a mile
distant, and next, perhaps, to one twenty
feet from the car. The change is made
almost instantly, and the pupil does not
have time to dilate or expand, as the rase
may be. Now. if you look through a
window on the side of the car opposite
from where you are sitting you will find
that this does not occur. The different
objects in the landscape blend and spread
out into a slowly moving panorama in
stead of being rapidly whirled past your
eyes. You get a much better view and
have the comfort of knowing* that it has
no bad effect upon your sight.—Chicago
Herald. '
A Get man entomologist declares that
spiders destroy more insect enemies than
do all the insect-eating birds.
PROF. REDD. FIELDS.
Missouri's Mathematical Prodigy
and His Wonderful Work.
One of the most wonderful men of
this day is living a few miles south of
Higginsville, Mo. He is known every
where as Prof. Reuben Fields, and
probably the only man in the country
who travels free on railroads and never
has n pass, and don’t bother about the
long and short haul clause. Prof. Fields
is undoubtedly a mathematical wonder.
He has no education whatever, does not
know'a single letter of the alphabet, nor
his own name if printed in sixteen-line
pica wood type, bold face. Nor doeshe
know one figure from another, though
he will solve any problem in mathemat
ics given him. Tne Professor called at
the office of the Globe-Democrat corres
pondent to-day and entertained him and
his friends for some time. He never
carries a watch, bnt when asked what
time of day he promptly answered four
teen minutes and thirty-four seconds
after 3. Though four watches varied
slightly as to the seconds, the minutes
were all right. When asked on what
day of the week the 23d day of Novem
ber, 1861, came, he answered, “Satur
day.’' He answered this and a number
of similar questions without a moment’s
hesitation. To the question: “What
will thirty-nine pounds of sugar at 13
cents a pound amount to ?” He prompt*
ly answered, $5.07, and before those who
were figuring with him could get the
question on paper.
The question; “What wiU nineteen
and a half yards of calico at six and
three-quarter cents amount tot" was
quickly answered—$1.31f. These were
very easy ones to the Professor, and he
asked for something hard.
The following was given him;
“If I run twenty : seven yards itt one
minute, how long will it take to run 6ix
miles?’* With very little study came
the answer—3911-9 minutes, or 6 hours,
311-9 minutes.
These problems seemed not to puzzle
him, as the answers came as soon as the
questions were asked. On the. following,
however, he required a little ’study,
owing, as he said, to the noise abont
him. The question was: “From here
to Louisiana, Mo., it is 159 miles; how
many revolutions does tho driving
wheel of an engine, 16 feet in circumfer
ence, mako in a run from this place to
Louisiana?”
The Professor studied a little, mutter
ing strings of figures. _ “Millions,
billions, trillions, quadrillions, 352 to
the mile—53,988 revolutions,” came the
answer before the calculators found out
how many revolutions it made to the
mile. The figures “734” were written
on paper and shown him. He did not
know what they were, and, in fact, he is
ignorant on any other subject than
mathematics, and then the question
must be asked verbally. He is 36 years
of age, and was born in Kentucky. He
claims that bis gift was given from
heaven, and says that it came to him
suddenly when 8 years old. He says
tho Lord made bnt one Samson, one
Solomon, and one Reub. Fields,
the one he gave strength, to the othor
wisdom, and to himself mathematical
instinct. He guards this instinct with
the utmost care, and will not answer
questions unless he is paid, fearing that
it will be taken from him should he
it to satisfy idle curiosity. He also
given the following:
“A has a certain sum of money; he
goes to a theatre and pays$l admission,
spends half of what he has left, and
pays $1 to get out; he goes to a second
theatre and pays $l admission, spends
half he has left, and pays $1 to get out:
he goes to a third theatre, pays $1 ad
mission, spends half of what he has left,
and then pays his last dollar to get out;
how much had he when he started?”
While one or two of those present
commenced to scratch up half-forgotten
algebra, the professor was soaring
among the “millions, billions, trillions,
quadrillions,” and then suddenly drop
ped down to $21 before the algebraical
calculators got their paper ready to com
mence. Before the professor left each
one present knew the dayof the week
each one was born on. The professor
accepted a dollar with thanks, and
promised another call to-morrow.
Luxurious Lounge.
The “Parsee chair” is announced as
the successor of the hammock. A sea
shore correspondent who has seen one
describes it as a sort of box or cradle of
mahogany, with a high back and low
sides. It is covered with Hindu rugs,
and has two large, soft pillows worked
in rich, Turkish embroidery. At each
coiner the chair is supported by ropes
which depend from the roof, and which
run through hollow pieces of mahogany,
making the supports seem like slender
and flexible wooden*columns. “In the
Pursee chair,” it seems, “a lady may
lounge and swing in the most picturesque
of attitudes, without suffering that cur
vature of the spine which the hammock
entails.”
A Long Sleep.
The fortnight’s sleep of the French
commercial traveller, Chaffat, which
created such a sensation ih London, Eng-
and, last spring, has been completely
eclipsed by a Russian sailor at the Wal
ton workhouse, near Liverpool. Win-
stoffsky was brought to the workhouse
in a sleepy condition, and at once went
off into a pleasant doze, which lasted
thiee weeks, when he woke up apparently
much refreshed. On awakening, Win-
stoffskv was quite convinced that ho had
only taken his usual night’s rest. He had
Iieen fed regularly, and his general
dition of health was^exccl'ent.
TnB Cremation Society of Zurich,
Switzerland, has adopted the Bourry
system, whereby only heated air commu
nicates with the body, which is burned
by the abundance of hot oxygen around
it. The process of cr< matron takes an
hour and a half, and can be seen through
a window in the back of the sarcophagus.
There is no smell of smoke.
Foots Huh la Where Angela Fear to
Trend.**
^9 Impetuous youth is often given to folly
Indiscretions; and, as a result, nervous,
j-—and organic debility follow, memory la
mpsired, self-confidence is lacking; at night
bad dreams occur, premature old age seems
retting in, rain is in the track. In confidence,
Tju can, and should write to Dr. K. V. Pierce,
of Buffalo, N. Y., the author of a treatise for
the benefit of that class of nUienta, and de
scribe your symptoms and sufferings. He can
cure you at your home, and will send yon full
parti ulars by mail.
Coarse brown paper soaked In vinegar and
placed on the forehead. Is good for a headache.
Children Starving To Death
On account of their inability to digest food,
will find a most marvelous food and remedy in
Scott’s Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil with
Hypophoephites. Very palatable and easily
digested. Dr. 9. W. Cohex, of Waco, Texas,
says: "I have used your Emulsion in Infan
tile wasting with good results. It not only
restores wasted tissues, but gives strength and'
increases the appetite. 1 aiu glad to use such
a reliable article.”
In Chicago, I1L, enough beer is consumed to
give each inhabitant 72(J glasses yearly.
Those who are trying to break up the bane
ful habit of intemperance will experience
great benefit from the use of Prickly Ash Bit
ters. Liquors derange the system. Prickly
Asn Bittern will remedy the evil results and
restore the brain, stomach and liver to healthy
action, thereby strengthening the will power,
thoroughly cleansing and toning up the sys
tem and remove every taint of disease. It is
purely a medicine, and while pleasant to the
taste, it cannot be used as a beverage by reason
of its cathartic properties.
Sweet clover is a reliable crop for owners of
apiaries, from July until frost.
Te I.adiea
Suffering from tUhctlonal derangements or
of the painful disorders or weaknesses incident
to the sex. Dr. Pierce's treatise, illustrated with
wood-cuts and colored plates (100 pages), sug
gests sure means of complete self-cure. Sent
for 10 cents in stamps. Address World’s Dis
pensary Medical A sociation, Buffalo, N.Y.
land, is preceptress o
If afflicted with sore eyes, nse Dr. Thomps
Eye-water. All druggists sell it at 25c. a be
Do Not Neglect
That tired feeling. Impure blood, distress after eatin
pains in the back, headache, or similar affections till
powerful disease obtains a firm foothold, and
ery Is difficult, perhaps tin possible. Take Hood’s
Sarsaparilla, the defender of health. In time to baa-
sh all bad feall oga and restore you to perfect health.
•When 1 took Hood’s Sarsaparilla that heaviness
my stomach left; the dullness In my head, and the
gloomy, despondent feeling disappeared. I began to
KIDDER’S
Over MM) Physicians have sent us their approval or
DIGEST*LIN, saying that It Is the best preparation
for Indigestion that they have ever used.
f -Dyspepsia where
’mssst.
JNSTIPATION.
DIGESTYLIN was taken that was not cured.
FOB CHOLERA IIFANTUM.
IT WILL CURB THE MOST AGGRAVATE]
IT WILL STOP VOMITING IN
IT WILL RELIEVE C<
For Sommer Complaints and Chronic
which are the direct results of Imperfect digestion.
DIGESTYLIN will effect an Immediate cure.
Take DVOESTYUN for all pains aud disorders of
the stomach; they all come from indigestion. Ask
your druogUt for DIGESTYLIN (price ®1 per*Urge
bottle). If he does not have It send one dollar to us
and we will send a bottle to you. express prepoM.
Do uot hesitate to send your money. Our house Is
reliable. Established twent, - five years.
WJI. F. KIDI>KR ACO.,
Manufacturing Ckemlatv. VJ J aba9t.,N.Y.
Thousands
any that
Ely’s Cream Balm
HAY-FEVER
ApplvROm in'ocacli nostril*
y blood s
clrculatlot
jr kid-
1 before.” G. W. Hull, A
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only
I. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
too Doses One Dollar
ia Curing all Diseases of the
ID, LIVER, STOM
ACH, KIDNEYS,BOW
ELS, £cc. ItPurificsthe
Blood, Invigorates and
Cleanses the System.
DYSPEPSIA,CONSTI
PATION, JAUNDICE,
RTngHEADARTng.'RTL-
I0US COMPLAINTS,&c
disappear at once nnder
iti beneficial influence.
It ii purely a Medicine
as its cathartic proper
ties forbids its use as a
beverage. It is pleas
ant to tne taste, and aa
easily taken by child
ren as adults.
St.Louis aud Kihsa. Oity
Singers and public speak
ers will find Piso’s Cure for
Consumption the best medi
cine for hoarseness and to
strengthen the voice.
Children will take Piso’s
Cure without objection, be
cause its taste is pleasant
Thousands suffer from
a short hacking Cough, who
might be cured by a few
doses of Piso’s Cure.
Sold by druggists.
CURES
Cougl _
in time.
^wSlall usSw;
Tastes good
JWARLIN REPEATING
RIFLE
' BEST IN THU
WORLD!
Urge Of small game.
BALLARD.
Gallery, HaaUag aud Target ElUca.
Scad for Illustrated Catalogue.
Marlin Fire Arms Co., Hew Raven, C01
Central University,
RICHMOND, KY. Next Session opens bep.t4,'87
Full Faculty, thorough instruction, healthy location,
moderate expense. For information and Gatf’
apply to I- u. Blanton, I). 1*., Chancellor.
PENSIONS Sj^TL^'^iSsS!:
I E. II. CiELOTON ik CO., Waalungton. D. O.
S5I
OPIUM!
thorn. Clears out ltats. Mice. Benches, Wci_
Bugs, Flies, Beetles, Moths, Ants. Mosquitoes,
Bed-bugs, Insects, l’otato Hues, Sparrows,
Skunks. Weasel, Gophers, Chipmucks, Moles,
Musk lists. Jack Rabbits. Squirrels, lie. & Sic.
HEM LICE.
“ Rough on Bats” is a complete preventive
and destroyer of Hen Lice. All* o 25c. box of
“Rough on Rats” to a rail of whitewash,
teen it well stirred up wfcflo applying. White
wash tho whole Interior of the llennery; tnsido
end outside of tho nests. Tho cure is radical
POTATO BUGS
^Forrotatotiucs, Insects c
cultural Sire) to be thoroughly
mixed with one to two barrels
of plaster, cr whet is tc*tc
■lacked lime. Much <jtp<
upon thorough mixing.
• '•* 1L0 tef— h —
r shrubs \ ^
s quit© effective when mbrul with
red lime. Much <Rpcnc3
1 thorough mixing, so ns
butoiho icison. Sprisklo
— — —-j, trees or shru&A when damp cr
wet, and is quit© effective when mbr<«l witi
**“ * ‘d on without moisture. V. hile ii
il state it is the most ectirt
! all Bug Poisons; when mtxej
jparatively harmless to ani
mals or persons, In any quantity they would
take. If prererTCdto use in liquid form.n table
spoonful of the full strength Rough os Rats’*
Powder, well shaken, in a keg of wnt<r and
applied with a sprinkling pot, spray syringe
or whisk broom, wiU bo found very effective.
Keep it well stirred up while using. Sold hy
-11 Druggists and Storekeepers. lfic.,25c.&$L
E. 8. Wells, Chemist, Jersey City. N.
Its concentrated 1
and strongest of all Bug Poisons; when mixed
TREATED FREE.
DR. H. II. GRH1EN Ac SONS,'
Specialists for Thlrteon Vetvre Past,
MvW-'.car.c
shafts:
11 sri«u order trial rend tUcin m stamps to pay poetags.
Kpilrimy (Pit-) Positively Cured.
II. II. tiltEEN Ac SONS, M. Da.,
ggQK Marietta street. Arlmitn, tin.
J.P. STEVENS &BR0.
JEWELERS.
Atlanta, Ga.
tend fer Catnl.g..,
GOLDSMITH <&, SULLIVAN’S
//
Fitten Building. Atlanta. Ga. Most practical College
South- Best course at leist cost. Bend for catakmpp.
BUSINESS
Education a specialty at JUOOUi:*.** lILSINKriH
UMVPUrilf Y,t AVlo'* tort
OPIUM 1
on trial.
gsjffc
V&asanA
THE ORIGITTJLL
LITTLE LIVER PILLS.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS!
f\4 4k Always ask for Dr. Pierce’s Pellets, or Little
V \Vv3 “ 'J Sugar-coated Granules or Pills.
BEING ENTIRELY VEGETABLE, Dr. Pierce’s Pellets operate without disturbance to the system*
diet, or occupation. Put up in-glass vials, hermetically scaled. Always fresh and reliable. As a
LAXATIVE, ALTERATIVE, or PURGATIVE, these little Pellets fivo the most perfect satisfaction. t
SICK HEADACHE.
stomach and bowels, are promptly relieved
and permanently cured by the use of Dr.
Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets. In ex
planation of the remedial power of tneso
> great a variety of diseases.
putnati
Pellets
it may truthfully be said that their action upon the system is
—. . —^ -ptisauo escaping their sanative influence.
ol. Mai
universal, not a gland —
Bold by druggists, for 2& cents a vial. Manufactured at tho Chem
ical Laboratory of World's Dispensary Medical Association.
Buffalo, N. Y,
William Ramico, Esq., of Mindcn, Kearney County,
Nebraska, writes: “I was troubled with boils tor
thirty years. Four years ago I was so afflicted with
them that I could not walk. I bought two- bottles
of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets, and took
one ‘Pellet’ after each meal, till all were gone. By
hat time I had no boils, and have had none since. I nave also
■on troubled with sick headache. When I feci it coming on.
take one or two * Pellets,’ and am relieved of tho headache.”
The Best
, “Your‘Pleasant Purgative Pellets’a
without question tho best cathartic —
the house all the time.”
. Ipi ,
is being foiced by a New Jersey florist,
and will be a fashionable flower the
coming winter for trimming wedding
gowns.
1 balm in Gilead?
_ > physician there 1
Thanks to D . Pierce, there Is a balm In his
-Golden Medical Discovery”—a “balm for
every wound” to health, from colds, coughs,
consumption, b- ouch it is, aud all chronic, blood,
lung ana liver affections. Of druggists.
Experiments
ing to have 2,^
that electric lamps claim-
power have only 800.
No investor eit pars so well as a good educa
tion, as is clearly shown by the record of the
Alumni of the Rugby School, Louisville, Ky.
It offers the best advantages, and enjoys tne
highest class of patronage. F( —
itlias stood with the fore
-— — fifteen years
the foremost in preparing
easiness life. The terms are
for catalogue to
A. L. McDonald, Principal.
securely scaled. Dr. J. B. Marckisi. Utica. N.Y.
Bronchitis Is cored by frequent small doses of
Piso’s Cure for Consumption.
>## |EiMl
alO
m
FOR A CASE OF CATARRH WHICH THEY CAN NOT GORE.
CtYMPTOMSOF CATARRH.
fuse,” watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious,
purulent, bloody and putrid; the eye* are weak, —
inflamed; there is ringing in tho ears, deafnraa,
coughing to clear the throat, expectoration of offensive
together with scabs from ulcers; the voice Is changed and has
a twang; the breath is offensive; smell and taste — *—
b above-named symptoms are likely to be present in any one
«e. Thousands or cases annually, without manifesting half of
the above symptoms, result in consumption, and end in the
e re. No disease is so common, more deceptive and dangerous,
understood, or more unsuccessfully treated by physicians.
By its mild, soothing, and healing properties,
„ DR. SAGES CATARRH REMEDY
ft WDFJ-T CUSS OS
Mart, “CoU la fta Rtti,” jmsj Catarrhal liafacto.
SOLD BY DBUGOISTS EVERYWHERE. ‘
FniOB, 80 OENVa
Prof. W. Haotner, the famous mesmer
ist, of Ithaca, JV. Y~, writes: “Some ten
years ago I suffered untold agony from
chronic nasal catarrh. My family physi
cian gave me up aa incurable, and said I
must die. My case was such a bad one.
that every day. towards sunset, my voice would become so hoarse
I could barely speak above a whisper. In the morning my cough
ing and clearing of my throat would almost strangle me. By the
•— -* Tw —'s Catarrh Remedy, in t K — >
Constantly
Hawkins and
Spitthg.
man, and the cure has been permanent.”
Thomas J. Ttusnnra, Ewe, sm Pine Street,
St. Louis. Mo., writes: “I was a great suf
ferer ffom -catarrh for three years. ' At
times 1 could hardly breathe, and was con
stantly hawking and spitting, and for the
last eight mouths could not breathe through
the nostrils. I thought nothing could Be
_ . done for me. Luckily, I was advised to try
Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, and I am now a well man. I be
lieve it to be the only sure remedy for catarrh now irwruifna.
tured. and one has only to give it a fair trial to experience
astounding results and a permanent cure.”
Eli Bobbins, BwwnP.O- Columbia a>„
ftu, says: My daughter had catarrh when
she was five years old. very badly. I saw
Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy advertised, and
procured a bottle for her, and soon saw
that it helped her; a third bottle effected
ajjarmanent cure. She is now eighteen years old and sound