Newspaper Page Text
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Mr, A. *T. Davenport
Milton* N. J.
Afflicted with Boils
Hood’s Sarsanarllla. Clears the
Blood and Gives Health.
'Large boll* broke out all over my face and
neck. Different medicines did not affect a
cure. I was at last advised to try Hood’s
.Sarsaparilla regularly and faithfully. I
yielded to his all vice and when I had taken
three bottles my face and neck were free
from all eruptions. 1 have been perfectly
Hood’s Sarsa¬ parilla
Cures
cured and am now in excellent health, and
confidently say that Hood's Sarsaparilla is
a wonderful blood purifier." A. J. DAV
■hpokt, Milton, New Jersey.
Ueod’e Pills cure all liver Ills. bUtouineM,
Jaundice, iudlgomtlon. sick headache. 29 cents.
swnjshw XV. 1., DOUGLAS *3 8HOK
equals custom work, costing the from
EHU1HE $4 to $6, best value for money
In the world. Nam* and livery price
,jm s _. i stamped on the bottom.
' pair warranted. Take no for substt- full
a tulc. See local paper* complete
”gnrwiWOTi\^ description of our
lines for ladies and gen
lAf’L DOwdfaTTtr’rrr tinmen or send for 77
luttrattd Catalogue giving in
•j IeEsH* - structions
I sum how to
U1IST K ■■ or¬
der by mail. Postage free. You can get the best
bargains of dealers who push our shoes.
$l2n$35SS?£5a»S
A Ifll P* ■* I# throiin-2» the country; ft umm,
PI R wif If I s Rh K Imfcw :, “ u * vacancies h ' iB u ° l In usesssary. towas and A
r»Ue* Men and wo»m*h of good character will Hud
this an exceptional opportunity for profitable cm*
p’ojrrnriit. Kpare hours may hi* ufiftd to good ad v an*
Ufa. Hlli B. V. Main JOIINHOXtV Sis., itlctiiuona, CO., Ta.
Hud
MIMtmtMIMfflflMIffMIMfmt HALMSBSilrClBWiniGiim
J ** CuroM aud i'roveuv* Heartburn, Rheumatism, Catarrh and imttg*»mon, Asthma. —
Pyspeysla, Useful In Malaria and Fever*. Cleanse* the
Teem anti Promote* tho Appetite, (Sweetens i
the Breath, Curat the tobacco Habit. Endorsed
•* A by the Medical Faculty, head for 10,15 or Note, 25
f cent package. Silver, Stamp* 2W.il or }\xtal New York.
Qm. K. HALM, 140 West St.,
j}|i* RAMONS e-ToNICF <2>Tonio Pellets. -AND- LIVER PIUS
.
TREATMENT for Constipation Bilioninm.
and
At all stores, or by msil 25o. double bo*; 6 double boxes
$ 1 . 00 . lilt OWN MF»« CO., Now York City.
A Guaranteed Cure
FOR
The Opium Habit.
We guarantee to cure the opium disease in
any form in fifteen attention. days, or Sanitarium no pay for at board, Salt
treatment or Austell.fra. Correspondence
Springs,near fidential. Address, Dus. Nti.sf Gcahamte* con¬
Opium Cure Co., or Look Box 3, Austeul. Q-a.
DROPSY Wm 8u g* WJF §£2 rmc.l Treatedfreo. 35 iiuny th.ui
sand caws yro
tiounced hopelwt. Prom firsMosc of symptom*, rapidly disappear.
*nd in ten days at least two-thirds all symptoms are reinov£<i- FRftE.
BOOK of testimonials of miraculous cures sent
Alt. TEN null. DAYS Otusbl TREATMENT FURNISHED FREE Atlftnto. by mall
A BOSS, Qm
J. SIX-GRAVES W. Rice, Atlanta, * ciostngiiiini Ga. ikv
ATLANTA BUSINESS UNIVERSITY,
« ATLANTA, GA.
Beoltkceplng, lluslncss Practice, .Short¬
hand, tfcc. Semi for catalogue.
MACLEAN, CURTIS Ac WALK Kit. MMurr*.
PATENTS I Inventor'. SIWL Guide
until Vateui nbtalued.Writo for
RISO’S CURE .FOR .
5 CenaiinptHrec and peoplo
who havo weafc lungs or Asth¬ !
ma, should uso Flso’s Curo for
Consumption. It has cared
thousands. It has not 1 njur
od one. It is not bad to take. t
It is the best cough syrup.
8old everywhere.
CONSUMPTION.
A. N. U....... ...... Twenty, '94.
( i Sell LOVELL on DIAMOND Sigm. CYCLES.
High Grade in Every Partteulor.
LATEST IMPROVEMENTS, LIGHTEST WEIGHTS.
We stake our business reputation of over fifty years that there
is no better wheel made in the world tha n the LOVELL JUAMOXV.
AGENTS WANTED.
I/Jo
(J /
Hem •. IFF. *3 ftv. IxtdrV.' Light ItoUtlfter. I Vi. SO tbs.
WARRANTED IN EVERY RESPECT. BICYCLE CATALOGUE FREE.
each. We Former have a few price, boys' and girls’ First bicycles which first we served. will close out at 9 4 I %Je, K *y sJ HZ
Send ten in $35.00. come, for LARGE 400 illustrated e cata¬
cents stamps or money our Cutlery, Fishing rage Tackle and hun¬
logue of Bicycles, Guns, Rifles, Revolvers. Skates,
dreds of other articles. things
With this catalogue any one can sit in their own home and order such as
they want. We guarantee it worth ten times this amount, ten cents being the exact
(lost of mailing.
JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS GO,, BOSTON, MASS.
*:•
Put* About Snow.
A foot of newly fallen enow makes
bnt one inch of water when melted.
Bnow seldom falls as far south as Pen¬
sacola, Fla., hnt has been known to
border the gulf from that point to
Brownsville, Tex. One hundred miles
north of Key West is the farthest point
south in Florida that it has ever been
known to fall, at Punta Boss, on Dec.
1, 1876. The only time snow was ever
known to fall at San Diego, Cal., was
during the great storm period of Jan.
15-17, 1882. The average annual fall
in Maine is seven foet. New York four
feet, and Iowa two and a half feet.
Enomhh statistics Rbow that 86 per
cent of the farm lands in that country
are cultivated by tenants, while 14 per
cent is cultivated by persons owning
the soil.
Re On Time to Caleb That float
Or t rain. or you’ll be left. Moreover, if you’re
sink on the way to your destination you’ll be
"left" If you haven't Hos tetter’s Stomach Bit
lieves tors along promptly with you. if That protective agent re¬
yrro you are troubled with
"travelers’siekne-H.” Take It along. Cramps,
colic, disorder of the bowels, malaria, rheu¬
matism, dyspepsia traveling are all remedied by it. It
U a good companion.
Stand up for the right, even though you be
placed in the minority rank.
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root cures
all Pamphlet Kidney and and Consultation Bladder troubles. free.
Laboratory Binghamton, N. Y.
The annnal death rate in the French army
Is 107 to 10 , 000 .
Wbea Traveling
Whether on pleasure bent, or business, take
on every trip a bottle of Syrup of Figj, aa It
acts most pleasantly and effectively on the
kidneys, liver and bowels, preventing fevers,
headaches and other forms of sickness. For
sale in 50 oentsani $1 bottles by all leading
druggists.
Ilecemljer Is the most fatal month in the
year for asthma.
Attention, Tourist.
The most pleasant and cheapest way to
reach Central Boston, Kttilroadand New York, Ocean and Steamship the East Is Coin¬ via
$24 in' ltv. The rate Is $42.30 for the round trip,
00 straight. Tickets include meals and
stateroom, Tables supplied with all the deli
cades of the season, For informa Ion call on
or address any agent of Central It. R.
StiUDEit Chanuks or WuATitisn cause
Throat Diseases. There Is no more effectual
remedy llromUlal for Troches." Coughs, Colds, etc., tlnin "Hroum 1 ,
Hold only in butt*. Price 35
cents.
Teething Children.
Nothing on earth will take children through
the tryingordeal of teething so pleasantly, and
very surely and safely, as Dr. King’s Royal
Oermi tuer. They all like to take it, and it
Belt, like magic in meeting the troublesof that
critical period. Thousands have tried it and
It has never been known to fall.
M. U Thompson Hall's & Co., Druggists, Is Condors
port. and only Pa., say Catarrh Cure the best
sure cure for catarrh they ever sold,
Druggists sell it, 75c.
Hblloh’s Cure
Is sold on a guaranlee. It cures inoipient, Con¬
sumption; it is the BestCough Cure; 25c,BOe, $1
k Ruddy Glow
^ tr 5=5
is evidence ||gp£
body is
getting When proper nourishment.
this glow of health is
absent assimilation is wrong,
and health is letting down.
Scoffs Emulsion
taken immediately arrests
waste, regardless of the
cause. yield Consumption must
to treatment that stops
waste and builds flesh anew.
Almost as palatable as milk.
Prppnrpil hr Scott A Bowne, N. All drnggi.ta
Unlike the Dutch Process
' No Alkalies
.
— OR —
Other Chemicals
are used in tho
preparation of
W. BAKER & CO.’S
I BreakfastCocoa
SHE which is absolutely
pure and soluble.
KTeI) KIM It the baa strength more th of an Cocoa th ree times
JSFEj|Wlth Starch, mixed
Arrowroot or
nomical, costing Sugar, less than and is far more eco¬
one cent a cup.
It is delicious, nourishing, aud kasilv
U iOlSSTKO. __
Sold by Grocers ererynh.r*.
W- BAKER & CQ„ Dorchester, Mass.
FARM AXD KAKDKY.
OBOW P.R'iffrPB FOR COWB.
Though the parsnips have a Eery
distinct flavor of i ts own, it does not
impart any had flavor to the miJk
when cows are fed on it. The root is
especially valuable, as the parsnip and
carrot have greater nutrition than do
the kinds of roots planted later and
grown more quickly. Early planting
of these seeds is necessary, because
they are small and germinate slowly.
It is a good plan to soak these seeds
four Gr five days till nearly ready to
germinate before planting them, In
that way the young plants which are
very small will come up, and can be
hoed once before they are crowded
by weeds.—[Boston Cultivator.
A NEW WAY TO “BTJHH TEAS.”
“The old method of bushing peas by
sharpening green limbs and twigs and
sticking them thickly along each row
has a good deal of labor in it, and is
moreover far from satisfactory in its
results,” says a correspondent of tho
Country Gentleman. “A high wind
is almost sure to lay both bushes and
growing peas flat along some portion
of tho rows. Then, too, the pods are
often hard to get at when hidden away
among the branches of some more than
usually vigorous bush. A better plan
is to stretch a length of narrow poul¬
try netting along the row, holding it
firmly in position by stout stakes at
each end. The netting need not be
wide, as it can be placed six or eight
inches above the soil, the yotxug peas
being able to catch on to it at that
height. Such netting in rolls of 150
feet is but little more than one-half a
cent per square foot, and if kept
housed when not in use it will last a
score of years. One’s garden will look
much neater for its use, while the peas
can bo picked from such a support
with much more ease than from the
old buBh support. ”
HENS EATING EGOS.
Upon this question the Town nnd
Country Journal of Australia says:
Of all the evil habits that hens can ac¬
quire that- of egg-eatiug is perhaps the
most provoking aud unpardonable,
and at the same time most incurable.
In tho nature or wild state the hen
hides her nest in a thicket to protect
it from her companions, male and fe¬
male. Here the preservation of its
eggs is paramount to everything else.
If we follow the natural order
things all is well; if wo deviate from
it a greater or less degree, to a corres¬
ponding degree will disastrous results
follow such action. “An ounce of
prevention is worth a pound of cure.”
Therefore start properly with the pul¬
lets by placing their nests in a retired
and secluded portion of the building.
Make a passageway in front of tho
nest, so that the sitter may be neither
seen or heard. Tho boards which
form this passageway also give,besides
the seclusion so much needed, a de¬
gree of darkness favorable to the quiet
occupation of tho nest, and prevent
intrusive visits from idle and meddle¬
some fowls; and if an egg is accident¬
ally broken the chances are rare that
it will bo seen by the patient sitter,
and will offer no tempations to acquire
tho vicious habit of egg-eating.
COrrEBAS FOB SICK TREES AND VINES.
The Journ&l of Horticulture says
that “a foreign paper states: Profes¬
sor Sachs, of Wurzburg, asserted, and
tho Royal Institute of Fruit and Vine
Culture at Giesenheim has tried exper¬
iments and is apparently satisfied, that
sulfate of iron is a valuable stimulant
to plants that are suffering from chlo¬
rosis or absence of the proper gveeu
color. They gave small trees two and
one-fifth pounds of copperas, and
large trees four and two-fifths pounds.
Tho results, it is said, were most grat¬
ifying. Strange to say in some eases
where the trees were Buffering from
the attack of aphides as well as defi¬
ciency of color in the leaves, the
aphides disappeared, aud frequently
the leaves became healthy within a
few days after the treatment The
sulfate of iron was dissolved in
water, and applied near the roots.
Early spring is the best time to try
the experiment. Some soils do not
require the addition of sulfate of
iron.”
Copperas, adds Vick’s Monthly, has
been tried in France on yellow grape
vines and ip all cases with excellent
results. In making the application
the soil above the roots removed to a
depth of several inches aud the cop
yperas water then poured over the
space and afterwards the soil restored.
PEPPERMINT AS A FABM CBOP.
Under favorable cultivation
conditions, peppermint may be
erly raised on muck and other
rich soils. The land should be
in June or July ajk* the toft kept v-^11
cultivated to the cad of the se&eoa tc
keep down gruBsea and to get » tins
lneohariical condition to the soil. Piwit
to peppermint the following spring. A
distillery may be erected to cost not
over $150 or it may lie costly, having
all necessary conveniences and worth
$1000, but $200 will put up a conven¬
ient building aud furnish the requisite
appliances for making good oil. No 1
government license is required. The 1
acreage of muck land planted to mint j
in Michigan is now doubling, aud dry ^
upland soils cannot compete with it j |
aud have been practically abandoned.
Mint was first raised in 1840 in St. }
Joseph county. In 1847 the price I
was $1.25 {Mir pound. The probable
production for the entire world at that
time was not more than 10,000 pounds, *
and yet the low price was attributed to
overproduction. Japanese mint can
not compete in the production of oil,
hut is better suited to convert intc
menthol—a crystallized salt. In this
condition it is exported largely, but
is of inferior quality. It is used as
an adulterant to the American and
English oils and for that purpose is a
dangerous competitor. During 1891,
45,321 pounds were exported at an
average price of $2.66; the exports
of 1892 were 54,987 pounds, at an
average price of $2.85.—[New Eng¬
land Ponestead.
COWPEAS.
It is a well-known fact that tho cow
pea, or field pea, as it is sometimes
called, is one of the numerous family
of plants to which belong the clovers,
beans, etc., long noted as of the great¬
est value as food plants, and later as
being valuable for green manuring,
writes John W. Delk, of Denmark,
Miss. They store up larger amounts
of nitrogen than other plants of dif¬
ferent families. Cow peas are rapidly
coming into use as knowledge of their
good qualities is advanced. They are
first a highly nutritious food for man
and domestic animals; second, among
the most valuable forage plants, and
third, the foremost renovator of worn
out or run-down soil. Peas will grow
on laud that ia too poor to grow any
other renovating crops without help,
and will make a fair crop. A good
crop of peas may be grown with very
little care; they grow on any
kind of ground, rich or poor,
but no one should expect il
to be so luxuriant on poor ground as
on a rich soil. If a large increase of
-seed is wanted, it would be a good idea
to give them a fair trial on good land,
aud when seed is plenty descend onto
the poor land. Planted in drills, one
peek to a half bushel of seed may be
used. Less seed will cover the ground
on rich land, aud a half bushel is none
too much on poor land. It is quite
common to sow one and a half bushels
to the acre broadcast and plow or har¬
row them in, When dry weather is
expected the peas should be planted
deep and the soil fined down over
them. The best pea for “soiling” is
the common ‘‘black” pea, as it tends
to have a more luxuriant growth of
vine; it is also a fine forage plant,
though if one should wish to cut them
with a mower the “whip-poor-will” or
specked pea would be the best. The
latter is a bunch variety, while the for¬
mer have luxuriant growth of vine.
As a general stock pea I prefer the
yellow creeper to any other variety.
The best time to plant them is from
the middle of May till the last of June.
When planted in drills they should be
three feet apart. Give one good work¬
ing aud a fine crop of peas is certain
to be the result.—[Courier Journal.
FABM AND UAISDEN NOTES.
Mix a little ground charcoal with
the feed for poultry.
Pound up old broken crockery for
the poultry. It takes the place of
grit.
A A lion Hen with niui a a tWen tiozen comb comn nexer never
lavs engs until it is thoroughly
healed.
When a more vigorous growth o:
wood is desired, prune during the sea¬
son of growth.
The principal reason for the prun
ing of the grape is in its great product
iveness, as the vines will nearly always
| overbear.
, A pound of butter is worth
j more
than a pound of beef, and a diary cow
will produce more butter than a beel
cow will beef.
If you have only a limited amount
to invest and are about, buying sheep
it will be far better to buy a few good
ones than many culs.
The best soil for an orchard is one
that is dry, firm, mellow, and fertile,
aud should be reasonably deep to al¬
ow the roots to grow.
-’ A flock of scrub sheep with a well
j bred shepherd will bring larger profi
i than a thoroughbred flock in th<
| hands of a scrub floekmaster.
Don’t Blame the Cook
If a baking powder is not uniform in strength,
so that the same quantity will always do the same
work, no one can know how to use it, and uni¬
formly good, light food cannot be produced with it.
All baking powders except Royal, because
improperly compounded and made from inferior
materials, lose their strength quickly when the can
is opened for use. At subsequent bakings there
will be noticed a falling off in strength. The food
is heavy, and the flour, eggs and butter wasted.
It is always the case that the consumer suffers
in pocket, if not in health, by accepting any sub¬
stitute for the Royal Baking Powder. The Royal
is the embodiment of all the excellence that it is
possible to attain in an absolutely pure powder.
It is always strictly reliable. It is not only more
economical because of its greater strength, but
will retain its full leavening power, which no
other powder will, until used, and make more
wholesome food.
ITEMS OP INTEREST.
Childless and unmarried men form
75 per cent of all the criminals of
Franco.
Over 68 per cent of the whole num
ber of English criminals are unable to
read.
There are over 5,000 assassinations
or attempts at murder every year in
Italy.
Capital punishment was abolished
in Switzerland in 1875 and restored in
1879.
Hanging in chains was abolished,
with many other cruel punishments,
in 1854.
The Romans had a jury system, the
jury being drawn from the roll of citi¬
zens.
' Ireland has the leakt proportion of
criminals to the million of popula¬
tion, 950.
Italy has the greatest proportion of
criminals, 5,140, to the million of
population.
In 1881 there were 126 convictions
for murder in France, and but four
executions.
The breaking weight of one inch
square is 5,781 pounds, tho breaking
weight of a piece of hickory of the same
dimensions is 270 pounds.
pgH w
V
JllL „_,fl if
11
— j
&
Tbs subject of the above portrait fs the
Rev. Charles Prosser, a much beloved and
most devout minister of the gospel of Car¬
mel, Northumberland Co., Pa. Mr. Prosser’s
usefulness, was, for a long time, greatly im¬
paired by a distressing, obstinate diseaso.
How will his malady tell In was his finally language. conquered Ho wo
let him own
says: “I was a great sufferer from dyspep
“ ^j. “d I had suffered so long that 1 was
eck . pi,, wa3 rendered unaesiraWe and
it seemed death wss near ; but I enme in
contact with Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical
Discovery and his 1 Pleasant Pellets.’ I took
twelve bottles bottles of the of ‘Pellets,’ ‘ Discovery,’ and followed and several the
hygenio advice of Dr. Pierce, and I am
happy worth to living say it now.” was indeed a cure, for life is
plaint," For dyspepsia, torpid or liver, Indigestion, biliousness, ‘‘.liver com¬
tion, chronic or diarrhea and all derangements constipa¬
of the liver, stomach and bowels, Doctor
Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery effects
perfect cures-when all other medicines fail.
It membranes has a specific of the tonic stomach effect and upon bowels. the lining
As
strength an invigorating, to the whole restorative system tonic and builds it gives
solid Jiesh to the healthy standard, when up
duced re¬
Mr. J. by F. “ wasting Hudson, diseases." prominent lawyer
Whitchervflle, Sebastian a cf
“Having suffered severely, Co., Ark., writes:
for a longtime,
from a torpid liver, indigestion, constipa¬
tion, nervoumes3 and general debility, and
finding health, no 1 relief induced in my efforts to Dr. regain my
was to try Pierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery and ’Pleasant
Pellets.’ Under this treatment, 1 improved
very much and in a few months was able to
attend to my professional duties.”
Yours truly,
To purify, enrich and vitalize the blood,
and thereby invigorate brace tbe liver and diges¬
tive organs, up the nerves, and put
the system in order generally ; also to build
A Girl’s Life.
When a girl of sweet 16 appears on
the street she has a cute, pert way of
walking and tossing her head as though
she owned the earth aud was going to
the middle of the next block to get it.
After she is 18 the world she owns ia
about as far away as the World’s Fair
was to the most of us, and at 20 she
gives up all hope of getting it at all.
By the time she is 25, poor thing! she
has a faint, vague suspicion that there
is a great deal of insincerity in the
world, and the thing for her to do ie
to get a position and do something married
useful. After awhile she gets
to a man who is not at all the sort of
a man she dreamed of. Then she con¬
cludes she would be better oil in heav¬
en. — Exchange.
The fear of robbery is ever present
with the officials of the Bank of France
and every day when the money it
put into the vaults in the cellar masons
are waiting and at once wall up the
doors with hydraulic mortar. The
cellar is then flooded with water.
Cast iron melts at 3,479 degrees F.,
copper at 2,548 degrees, gold at 2,-
590 degrees, silver at 2,233 degrees,
lead at 717 degrees and cast tin at 443
degrees.
up both solid flesh and strength after grip,
pneumonia, diseases, “Golden fevers Medical and other Discovery” prostrating hsi
no equal. It does not make fat people more
corpulent * but builds up solid, ten olcsoms
fieth. Do
you feel dull, languid, low-spirited,
have fullness or bloating after eating, tongue
coated, lar appetite, bitter frequent or bad taste in mouth, irregu*
specks” before headaches, prostration “floating an!
drowsiness after eyes, meals! nervous
If you havo any considerable number of
these symptoms, you are suffering from
torpid indigestion. liver, The associated with dyspepsia, or
disease the greater the more number complicated of you*
No matter what stage it has reached, symptoms. Dr.
Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery will sub*
duo it.
tration, Nervousness, sleeplessness, debility, and nervous kindred pros*
nervous dha
blood. turbances Tho are generally due to suffers impoverished for want
of rich nervous blood system nourish and sustain
pure, to
it. Purify, “Golden enrich and vitalize the blood by
taking these troubles Medical vanish. Discovery” and all
nervous
Tbe “Golden Medical Discovery” is far
better for this purpose than the much ad¬
vertised nervines and other compounds, so
loudly recommended for nervous prostration,
as they invigorate, “ put the brace nerves and to sleep,” strengthen,- but do
not up so
the thus ftervous giving permanent system as does .benefit the and “ Discovery,* radical
a
cure.
Buy cf reliable dealer?. With any other*, will
something else that pays them better
probably be urged as “ just as good.” Per¬
haps A Book it is, for (136 taein; pages) but treating it can’t be, of the for fore¬ you.
going diseases cf borne end pointing also containing out successful
means cure, vast
numbers of testimonials, (with phototype
portraits of writers), references and outer
valuable information, will be sent on receipt
of World’s six cents, Dispensary to pay Medical postage. Association Addrett,
Invalids’ Hotel Buffalo, and Surgical H. Y. Institute, d
Main Street,