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AGRICULTURAL.
TOPIfS OF INTERJEST RELATIVE
TO FARM AND GARDEN.
SMUT IN WHEAT.
Smut in wheat was once a great cause
of loss and complaint, and it Was found
that the smut increased when smutty
seed was used. I found by making a
strong briie with blue vitriol dissolved
in it, putting it in a tub large enough to
bold a tight basket in which the seed
wheat was placed—the wheat stirred aud
skimmed, then rftised out of the brine
and allowed to drain,when it was poured
out or put iu bags and so remained twelve
to twenty-four hours, and then sown in
the usual manner. I never found this to
fail as a remedy in wheat. The strong
brine was useful to float out light and
probably diseased grains,aud also to per¬
fectly introduce the vitriol to all the
grain-of wheat. Two years ago, think¬
ing of this, I poured my seed corn on the
floor and poured among it a solution of
blue vitriol and gave it a good stirring.
But it will be seen that that way of ap¬
plying the vitriol did not surely roach
every grain. The result was much less
smut than in former j-ears.— Hoard's
Dairyman.
POINTS ABOUT POULTRY.
I have learned to choose such pullets
for eggs as in some respects resemble a
typical dairy cow. They incline to
wedge-shape, being light and rather nar¬
row in front, and very wide and low
down behind. Their legs are rather
short and set wide apart. These are the
principal characteristics of good layers
and breeders. Carefully avoid the leggy,
high-built, reared-up hen of the game¬
cock style. They may makegood racers,
flyers or fighters, but they are rarely good
layers or profitable market birds. It is
the shoit-legged, heavy-set motherly
looking hen that shells out the eggs, at¬
tends strictly to business when sitting,
aud is successful in rearing a family. I
have learned, too, that a laying hen eats
little more than one not laying, and also
that it is a very easy matter to reduce the
profit of a flock of twenty to zero by
keeping five or six chronic non-layers
among them.
Before marketing surplus fowls fatten
them. This is beat done by inclosing in
a small yard where they can obtain little
exercise and feeding liberally with mixed
grain, corn, oats and wheat, with occa¬
sional rations of boiled potatoes or other
vegetables, chopped apples, etc. But
right here is where the greatest caution
must be exercised, or you will kill the
entire lot in less than a week. When a
fowl is being fattened remember that it
must have plenty of coarse gravel,broken
crockery or glass to enable it to grind
the increased quantity of food you give
it. And also it must have abundance of
pure water. With a sufficiency of these
requisites, and a variety of food, a fowl
will fatten nicely in about two weeks,
and will then sell for the top prices, while
a common, skinny cull will not fetch
enough to pay for catching it__ Exam¬
iner,
THE BROPER CARE OF A COLT.
We will starUvith the suckling at the
UR-bit-fflOWd presumi that it is
good parentage, both sin. mid dam,
it is sound and able to stand and walk
within fifteen minutes after it breathes.
At the age of a week most farmers come
to work the dam and let the suckling
follow around as best he can, and at the
age of four months, the colt being then
of sufficient age to wean, the dam has
performed a good summer's
just as hard as her gelding mate with no
colt. This method is entirely wrong.
The heated blood, tiresome labor of both
mare and colt is really killing both.
The mare and colt during the first
four, five or six months should be kept
in good pasture where there is plenty of
good water and shade. While it may be
practicable to wean the colt at four
months, we certainly prefer six, and now
comes the most important period of the
entire five years of the colt’s growth, and
if starved or stunted tho first winter it.
never fully recovers. Not only the size,
^JJi^fiwhole jured7ijH^fctj^regained. frame of the animal is in
The i plenty of
good, clean hay, pluin" d*
times, and we would give half and
of ground oats and wheat bran twice a
day, about two quarts at a mess. We
give this dry, but. if scalded and theu
cooled it will be better, V well-to-do
farmer told me once, this would be too
much; I think he was right for the first
week or two, but certainly not for the
cold winter days, nor the spang either.
I asked him what damage it would do;
his answer was too rapid a growth. He
had previously told me that he would
treat a colt as he would a boy. I asked
him if he ever knew too big a growth of
bov, but to this there wus no answer.
The colt should have a warm place to
protect himself from cold weather and
storms, a bed of dry straw or sawdust to
sleep upon, or to lie down at pleasure; he
must not be confined to the stable, but
have a yard; or, better still, an open
field to run in, in no case should he be
allowed to stand on a hard floor.—
Durden's Spirit.
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
A hornless bull is a safeguard to human
life.
Overfed fowls will not lay well, and, in
cases of the larger breeds especially, they
are more liable to die from apoplexy.
If you have not been converted to shel¬
tering cows see how much they shrink in
their milk the first cold storm they arc
iu.
To insure a good supply of eggs make
the poultry house warm and free from
draughts and vary the food as much as
may be.
The aeration of fresh-drawn milk is the
only expedient known to properly expel
the animal heat and to lessor THe tang of
undesirable odors -'
To use JuaMs 1 for breeding purposes
I^MBger oi'age than three years old is * an
act directly in opposition to the principles
of progressive breeding.
Five average “native” cows, fed on
fat of the farm, will pay better returns
than ten grade animals, whose staff of
life is a hay-rick and straw stack.
The carrot is the root crop preferred by
horses. The made of feeding carrots
horses is to chop them fine and give each
horse half a peck three times a week,
If the farmer were obliged to buy the
vetegables used in his family through the
year, he would begin to understand how
much money there is in a good garden.
HOUSEHOLD MATTERS.
EGG 8CAI.XA)PS.
Boil five eggs three minutes; when
cold, remove the shells, and chop
the eggs up roughly. Have ready a tea
cupful of mashed potatoes, and one of
well-boiled rice; mix thoroughly to¬
gether, add a teaspoonful of vinegar, the
same of Worcestershire sauce, pepper,
salt, and a tablespoonful of malted but¬
ter. Mix well, then put into scallop
shells, if you have them; if not, any gem
or muffin pans will do. Sprinkle bread
crumbs over the top, and a few bits of
butter, and bake to a light brown.—
Housekeeper.
VEAL 1’IE.
Cut a breast of veal small, and put ii
in a stew-pan with hot water to cover it;
add to it a tablespoonful of salt, and set
it over the fire; take of! the scum as it
rises; when the meat is tender turn it
into a dish to cool, take out all the small
bones, butter a tin or earthen basin or
pudding-pan, line it with a pic paste, lay
some of the parboiled meat in to half fill
it; put bits of butter the size of hickory
nuts nil over tho meat; shake pepper
over, i ■ wheat-flour over until it
looks . then till it nearly to the top
with some of the water in which the meat
was boiled; roll a cover for the top crust,
puff paste it, giving two or three turns,
and roll it to nearly half an inch thick¬
ness ; cut a slit in the centre and make
several small incisions on cither side of
it; lay some skewers across the pie, put
the crust on, trim the edges neatly with
a knife; bake one hour in a quick oven.
A breast of veal will make two two-quart
basin pies; half a pound of nice corned
pork, cut in thin slices and parboiled
with the meat will make it very nice,and
very little, if auy, butter will be required
for the pie; when pork is used, no other
salt will be necessary —Prairie Farmer.
WHIPPED CREAM.
Any good rich cream will easily whip
to a froth, and when uuce prepared may
be kept in a cold place till wanted. As
long as it remains sweet it will not sepa
rate or go back, Even after it sours it
often remains stiff, so it is no test of its
sweetness for it to remain so. Pure
cream from the milk of an Alderney cow
is usually too rich to whip well, and a
•little water must be added to it. Try it
first, and if it seems rich and heavy, like¬
ly to turn buttery with whipping, add a
very small portion of water to a certain
part, and try to whip that. In whipping
cream skim off the beaten cream as it
rises, and rest it on a seive to drain.
There will always be a little liquid in any
cream that will not turn to froth. This
is excellent in coffee. Pile the whipped
cream in a bowl, and set on the ice till
needed. It makes an excellent dessert
sauce, and is a delicious addition to the
top of a cup of chocolate, or to a cup of
breakfast coffee. There are few better
dishes for dessert than charlotte russe,yet
the average housekeeper dreads this des¬
sert, because she is not accustomed to
whipping cream. In the city some trou¬
ble may be experienced in getting cream
rich enough to whip well, but there can
be none in the country, as the cream from
the milk of an ordiuary cow will easily
whip to a froth. A dish containing the
cream to be whipped had better be act in
a pan of snow or cracked ice to facilitate
the process. This is necessary to success
in summer, and a wise precaution in win¬
ter .—New Pork Tribune.
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
Boiling water for half an hour will de¬
stroy all disease germs.
Cure a stiff neck with a plaster of mus¬
tard and warm molasses.
Oilcloths will last longer if one or two
layers of wadded carpet-lining are laid
under them.
Borax, ammonia aud oat meal will
soften hard water, which dries thv skin
when washed in.
After water-soaked shoes are dry, give
them a rubbing with kerosene oil to re¬
move the hardness.
Brighten the eyes by bathing them in
co ' ( * water . an( I always press them toward
the nose when drying,
Rub weak spines with a mixture of a
pinch of salt, tablespoonful of brandy,
and a teacup of water.
Cure a tickliug iu the throat with a
pinch of dry pulverized borax placed on
tongue.and slowly dissolved,
To remove cofree stains, put thick
glycerine on the wrong side of the arti¬
cle nnd wash out iu lukewarm water.
Olive oil saturated with camphor makes
an excellene application for inflammatory
uwelliugs, also rubbing rheumatic joints.
Lay a piece of cold charcoal on a bum,
and the pain will immediately cease;
keep it on for one hour aud the wound is
healed.
Tea leaves are good to scatter over
carpets before sweeping, not only to
freshen the colors, but also to prevent the
dust arising.
If one wishes to cool a hot dish in a
hurry, it will be found that if the dish
be placed in a vessel full of cold, salty
water it will cool far more rapidly tlian if
it stood in water free from salt.
Discolored tea and coffee pots may be
cleaned by filling them with water iu
which two or three teaspoon fuis of wood
ashes have been placed, and lettiug it
boil up, then wash thoroughly with hot
soapsuds and rinse.
One may utilize old matting which is
no longer fresh enough to look well, by
putting it under carpets. It can be
cleaned perfectly by washing it on both
sides with hot salt and water; hang it
on a line outdoors to dry.
Silk must never be ironed, as the heat
takes all the life out of it and makes it
seem stringy and flabby. If, however,
you wish to press out old bits of silk and
ribbon for fancy work, use an iron only
moderately hot, and place two thickuessef
of paper between that and the silk.
A Feline Curiosity.
Judge G. A. Ringwald is the happy
possessor of a feline curiosity. This par¬
ticular tabby is nearly thirty years of
age aud, therefore, so far as his species
is concerned, the oldest inhabitant in the
territory. He is also blind, deaf and
dumb, and otherwise eminently decrepit.
The animal, however, finds his way about
with ease, through the sense of smell,
despite his several little infirmities. Flor¬
ence, for years, gloated over her tobacco
chewing dog, but wc defy her to produce
a cat that can hold a candle to this one.—
Yuma (Cal.) Times.
A son of President Dwight, of Yale, is
said to know more Latin and Greek than
his father.
SOUTHERN NOTES.
INTERESTING NEWS FROM ALL
POINTS IN THE SOUTH.
9ENERAL PH OGRESS AND OCCURRENCES
Which are happening below ma¬
son’s AND DIXON’S JUNE.
Officers cLjSjx cavalry companies, of
Virginia, merln Richmond Wednesday
and organized the first regiment of Vit
ginia cavalry.
Dr. W. J. Thohihs, one of the, most
prominent physicians of North Carolina,
died in Wilmington, oh Tuesday, of diph¬
theria, aged seventy-two veRrs.
Levy Fite <& broke Wolfsou’s out Wednesday morning in
Orleans, and crockery stole, New
four stores of the Touro
block, on Canal street were burned out.
A bill has been introduced in the Vir¬
ginia burg, Legislature to incorporate the Pitts¬
West Virginia and Potts Valley
Railroad with a capital stock of 110,000,
000 .
The members of the international
American conference believe they will be
rei idy for adjournment trip' early in April and
then will Mart- on a through the
south.
A special from Thomasville, Ga., says:
The discovery of phosphates on the lands
of Mr. Mallet, south of Boston, Thomas
county, is reported, and causes consider¬
able excitement in that locality.
A meeting of some of the capitalists of
Greenville and Charleston, S. C., was held
at the latter city on Saturday, and steps
were taken for the organization of a
company to build a $100,000 acid cham¬
ber and fertilizer works.
A grand reunion and supper was tend¬
ered the visiting singers at New Orleans,
on Saturday, 1,000 covers being laid for
this royal feast. Nearly all the singers
have decided to remain until after mavdi
gras, in order that they may witness the
pageants.
Black Bros., tobacco factory, at Wheel¬
ing, West Virginia, Tuesday which was taken
charge proprietors of being by charged the government, with
the swind¬
ling in over-weight packages, started up
again on Wednesday, a settlement having
been effected.
The united labor party of Tennessee
held a state convention at Nashville,
last Tuesday, to prepare their state or¬
ganization. during tin Seven delegates and four were present,
forenoon, in the af¬
ternoon, but they went on undismayed
and transacted their business.
Ellison Mounts was hanged at Pike
villi-, Ky., on Wednesday, for participat¬
ing in her the brother, murder of Miss cool Adafair the McCoy
and lie was to last,
and face, as declared the black cap the was Hatfield pulled over his
that outlaw
gang forced him to engage in the murder.
A special dispatch freight from Pocahontas,
Va., says a local train jumped the
track Monday at Pounding Mill, Tazewell county,
evening. wrecked, The engine and five
cars were killing Captain R. D.
Puck, agent Hull Coke and Coal compa¬
ny, Engineer Bam Glowers, and a brake
man, name unknown.
A bill was introduced in the Virginia
qualified legislature, Monday, to submit to the
voters of that state in November,
1800,the question of limiting the funding
of the public debt uuder the act of Feb¬
ruary 14, 1882, commonly known as the
Riddleberger bill, and the acts amenda¬
tory thereof, to July 1, 1891.
The Brosius Moter Sewing Machine
coin ipany of Atlanta, Ga., has sold to a
syn dicate the right to manufacture
aud sell the motor machine iu the United
States outside the thirteen Southern
States, Maryland and the District of Co¬
lumbia. The price paid for the privilege
was one million threo hundred thousand
dollars.
There has been a great sensation at
Smithfield, N. C’., the past few days, ou
occount of the trial of J. E. Starling for
murder. Ithas resulted in an acquittal.
He was charged with the murder of au
aged woman, his his mother-iu-law, and lit¬
tle boy, nephew, who were found
dead, with their skulls crushed, iu a
branch near home.
The first through train over the Cape
Fear and Yadkin Valley railway, just
completed Monday to Wilmington, N. C., left
there on for Mt. Airy, 248 miles
distant. The whole line embraces about
850 miles, and is being rapidly extended.
Tho and immense completion territory of the roads fTrrri opens new
Wilmington. to -..55 - ,>f
- - ^
.
,,,*r.j Vid engine and hind ear collided
^Saturday morning in the suburbs of
Staunton, Ya., on the Chesapeake & Ohio
ruilroad, resulting iu the killing of Ed¬
ward Slater and Thomas Kidd, both of
Charlottesville, Virginia, and seriously
injuring Thomas Williams, of Louisa
Courthouse, Peter Tyler, Taylor Johnson.
Thomas Bragg, aud two others names uot
known, all employed on the road.
A double tragedy occurred at Charles
ton, 8. C., Monday night. Napoleon
I .aval called at the store of 11. Fcldemann
& Co., and asked to see his wife, who had
been separated from him down, for some time.
When the woman came Laval shot
her, and then entering the store, shot
Feldemnnn. Both of the victims are
thought to be fatally wounded. The af¬
fair has created a great sensatiou, as the
parties business are and well society known circles. and prominent in
TO CLOSE THE FACTORIES
AND TO KEEP THEM CI.OBED UNTIL A BET
TLEMENT IB BEACHED.
Tho members of (he Manufacturers
association of Woburn, Mass., at a meet
ing Tuesday night, voted to rlose every
leather factory represented in the associa
tion and to keep them closed until the
men return to work nt the factory of
Beggs & Cobb. This means mi enforced
idleness of nearly two thousand men as a.
result of the recently adopted price list.
The manufacturers, it is claimed, have all
adopted and are now paying living the price list
of the arbitrators and are strictly*
up to the letter of the decision of tho
board, which was practically au increase
in wages over what the men formerly ob¬
tained of about 5$ percent. They claim,
however, they agreed that the do, men and are not they doing have ns
to that re¬
peatedly violated the agreement.
AN ICE TRU8T
FACTORIES IN CHATTANOOGA, TENN., COM¬
BINE INTO A TRUST.
The three ice manufactories of Chatta¬
of nooga, all their Twin., have combined to dispose Ice
Company organized, product to the Central of
for the purposes
the trust. The price of ice lias been ad¬
vanced sixty-six and two-thirds per cent.
Consumers are raising stock to build aa
independent factory.
♦
The total railway eonstrucuo" C.rvh-.a
1889 iu the United Stales v. -’s <u‘. L .T
miles. *81
* friokery.
JSten fn buying toilet soaps, said the
dealer, you are fcot always sure that you
arte good getting toilet the jar'jele worth should of your not moaey. contain A
more thair fr%!rime Tjjni to eighteen per cent.
of water. unscrupulous
turer ways. increa In ft'Ifcp rabSRF amount h8 fdftes in various water
**•«
into the UndergJs: soap # it hardros alter the boil
ing it the wttSfc in other instances he
mixes by mechanical means into
the soap; in a third and equally large class
class of cases he introduces some powerful
chemical, enables such as Glauber's salts, which
him todntroduce as much as sev
therefore, enfcy percent* ien of water. It is obvious,
that pounds of honest toilet
soap would coma in nine pounds if thor
oughly chemically dried,*and that ten pounds treated
would contain less than three
pounds. selling Nov is the wrong confined to
the three pounds for nine to the
innocent purchasers. The spurious soap
is affected by water five times as much as
the genuine. In the wash-bowl or bath¬
tub it dissolves visibly before the eye.
Where it is honestly made rival can be
U8C< I bfty times,.it only lusts ten. If left
by accident in the water, it dissolves until
,!k - surrounding liquid is thick suds.
There are soaps of this sort in the market
which are advertised as first class and sold
at high prices. Have an eye on the man
who calls on you and pretends to give
you bargains by saying it is the
last of the lot, tand tempts you with a
quick-falling fume there, semis of prices. The per¬
is ana thb showy wrapper;
but it is sixty per cent, water, instead of
honest soap.
A Spider-Web Telephone,
A gentleman was watching some spi¬
ders, when it occurred to him to try what
effect the sound of a tuning fork would
have upon them. He suspected that they
would take it for the buzzing of a fly.
He selected a large, ugly spider, that had
been feasting on flics for two months.
The spider was at one end of its web.
Sounding the for*:, the man touched a
thread at the other side, and watched the
result. Mr. Binder had the buzzing
sound conveyed to him over his tele¬
phone wires, bufTiow was he to know on
which particular wire it was traveling?
lie ran to the centre of the web very
quickly, and felt all around until he
touched the thread against the other end
of which the fork was sounding; then,
taking would unother thread along, just as a
man take an extra piece of rope,
he ran out to the, fork and sprang upon
it. looked Then at he the repeated fj-rk. He a littlo way, puzfcled. and
A was
He had expect to find a buzzing fly.
He with got delight, on tholfork again, and danced
music him. idently the sound was
to
Mere Flower Shows.
-
Nowadays, a house of mourning be¬
comes, on the da^ of the funeral, a sort
of floral exhibition. In many instances
the persons indulging in these displays
florist can^ll-afford and undertaker the expense, as testify. the unpaid It
can is
well enough to have a floral wreath or
cross, or a few cut attended (lowers at a funeral.
The other day I a funeral, and,
although who had the deceased was a poor laborer
worked for a dollar and a half a
have day, the flowers covering a'hundred his casket must
cost over dollars. It
would have been bfepy to have given his
poor widow the money than spent it for
useless flowers, This is an evi! that
should be remedied.
A Story Without End.
We are half a mind to begin to write a
story that may never cud, founded i m
facts that are obvious. Hippodromus,
taking Lueignano, his morning walk in the streets of
borer, and comes upon him: Theodectes, a la¬
always says to “Why are you
at work? ” Theodectes answers:
“I am always at work to get money to
buy food to give strength do more work
that I may get more money to bny inore
food to give more strength to do more
work to get more to get more money to
buy more food to get more strength to do
more work to get more money to buy—”
This is the beginning of the story without
end,and the facts upon which it is found¬
ed—they are without end also.
You know, that if you had a bent tube,
one arm of which was the size of n ;/p e -
hold stem, the and the otjet-wsts-TiJ would ‘enough to
ocea n, ua ifer stand at the
same height equalize/fools as in the other. Con¬
troversy and wise men in
the same way—and the fools know it.
Hark! to the sound of humanity’s wails!
Millions of people with aches and with ails.
Headaches and humors, a merciless Hood,
Weakness of ltmgg and disorders of blood.
Yet there’s a helper that certainly saves.
Thousands of people from premature proves.
The remedy is Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical
Discovery. eheek8 bronchitis, It cures purifies' coughs, relieves asthma,
eruptions unsightly the blood, heals
sores, and pimples nud is
without a rival for all the ills that spring from
a disordered li ver. All druggists.
Don’t hawk, and blow and spit, but use Dr
Sage's Catarrh Remedy. Of druggists.
Strange to say, the color that ruus is not a
fast color. What a curious language ours is ?
Watch for “Murray” Buggy adv. next week.
Prepare for Spring
Sow is tho time to attend to your personal condi¬
tion In preparation foj* the chan^o to spring • M
son. If you hare r.ot “wintered well,*' if you are
tired out from overwork, if four blood has become
impure from close confinement In badly ventilated
offices or shops, you should take Hood’s i-orsaparilla
at. once. It will purify and vitalize your blood,
create a good appetite, and give your whole system
tone and strength.
“For a ant-class spring medicine my wife and I
think very highly of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. We both
took it lost sprinv. It did us a great deal of good
»nd we felt better through the hot weather than
ever before. It cured my wife of sick headache,
trom which she has Buffered a great deal, and re¬
moved me of a dissy, fired fee Lag. I think every
on« ought to take something to purify tho blood be¬
fore the hot weather comes on, and wo shall cer,
tatnly take Hood’s Sarsaparilla thtg spring.
J. H. Pearce, Supt Granite Ry. Co., Concord, N. H.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
fold by all druggists. six for $3. Prepared only
l>y C. I. HOOD Jt CO., Apothecarlss, Dowell, Hass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
99
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BRADFIELO REGULATOR CO. ATLANTA 0 an «
SOLO t yall DRues/srs.
nouim uOMIH
wiy ATIAsTA. Gs. Office #.)» Wkltabsli .Sg.
Queer Ffttenta,
One of the most original patents la aa
automatic bath tub, ■which starts the hot
!lI1 d cold water at a given moment in the
morning tains exactly to which the right it has been set, main
temperature of it
h y graduating the flow of water, rings a
bell when all is ready, and, two minutes
inter, about suddenly foot and diops the sleeper’s pillow
a turns him out. Among
odd inventions are “chicken hop
P !es . ” which walk the chicken right out
of the bee garden when she tries to scratch;
“the moth excluder,” which auto¬
matically shuts up all the beehives when
the hens go to roost; “educational bal
loon,” a toy ballcon with a map of the
world on its surface; side-hill annihila
tors,”—stilts to fit on the down hill legs
of a borse when he is ploughing along a
side hill; and of the “hen surpriser,” a
device that drops the newly laid egg
through the bottom of the nest, with in¬
ten t to beguile and wheedle the hen into
a t once laying another,
Tn a New Dress.
At a recent “fashionable event,” a lady
lost a diamond earring of great value,
which could nowhere be found. There¬
fore, a gentleman who had just returned
from the East, professed his capability to
discover the missing link by means of an
Indian drug. Accordingly he asked all
the company to be seated, and after leav¬
ing the bowl room he reappeared with a colored
glass containing a liquid. He then
announced that he should ask all those
present to dip their fingers into the vessel,
and declared that should any one have
secreted the jewel for a joke, the jester’s
hand would be tinged with red. Every
the one’s digits came out perfectly white, but
the earring bowl. was found at the bottom of
Let a man practice the minor virtues.
How much of life is lost in waiting! Let
him not make his fellow-creatures wait.
How many words and promises are prom¬
ises of conversation! Let his be words
of fate.
How’s This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
nny case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
taking F. J. Hall’s CHENEY Catarrh CO., Cure. Toledo,
Sc Props., O.
Cheney We, the undersigned, the last 15 have and known believe F. him J.
for years,
perfectly ions and financially honorable able in to all carry business out transact¬ any obli
pntion made by their firm.
West & Tnr ax, Wholesale Druggists, Tole
Walijinq, do, O. Wholesale
Hinnan & Marvin,
E. Druggists,. Toledo, O. Toledo
H, Va.vHof.sen, Cashier, National
Hank, Toledo, O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act¬
ing of the d irectly upon Price the blood ~oc. and bottle. mucus surf Sold aces
all Druggists. system. per by
If afflicted with sore eves useDr. Isaac Thomp¬
son's Eye-Water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle.
No cl ranger should leave the city without a
box of “Tanslll’s Punch” 5c.
v 1 fc
, \
OXB BKJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup and refreshing of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
to the taste, and acts
gentlyyetpromptly Liver and Bowels, cleanses on the Kidneys,
the sys¬
aches tem effectually, and fevers dispels colds, head¬
and cures habitual
only constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
duced, remedy pleasing of its kind ever pro¬
to the taste and ac¬
ceptable its to the stomach, prompt in
action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy its and agreeable substances,
many excellent qualities com¬
mend it to all and have made it
the most popular remedy k nown.
and Syrup $1 bottles of Figs is for sale in 60o
gists. Any by all leading drug¬
reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it Do not accept
any substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
LOUISVILLE, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
KY. HEW YORK. N.t.
THE 4 <<0^ H
oa*
sgbD CatarR^o' H§$y]
in
hay- S
FEVER
59 Cts.
COLD-HEAD 3BI-Y BltOTHEKS, Warren St.,
W New York.
j*-. 1
fir-w s
I :
1
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3 SHOE GENTLEMEN. FOR
BEST IN THE WORLD.
niES, Ollier MUSSES specinltiea and far BOVS. CINTLEIIEN, I.A
None genuine unless name and priee are
annulled ou bottom. Sold everywhere.
:W~Scnd address on postal for valuable
Intormaiion.
W. L DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
FORA Double Breech-Loader
Breedb-boadgr*, $4 to fbO.
* Wlweboolor l .of Klhoo, $11 1o $13.
wjP ^ 0 Pclf-eoeklofr Brof<h4o**rt*» Kcrolwr*. Hiffet, Hlekrl-filolod, $2.«4 to *lS,Q0. $2.0«.
Send 2c. itoffif for 40-pojW CoUiopue sod OUT* 15 per cent.
,-ol* Jtgsnoy. Dr. Wrrrlll. 58? Oslo Bf.. Buston. Muss.
w. f
% -=.
few*.
t V
l V I-r
•5/ i~V m
K *1 ifir s 00 " 5s
r H,
1 a |
tfi SJ
}Ak §(((lli(l :lii((inii(iTii((®|(ii
V \i
% i
• • 1 % . Mi
. . ; •• .I.’. . • r • • H. -Ul. Copyright,* • • • 4_*
• » 1889.
JEWELS AND LACES.
“ Oh, girl with the jewelled fingers, I”
Oh, maid with the faces rare
What are your Jewels and what are your
faces worth to you if. from undergoing the
trying ordeals which fashionable society im¬
poses on its devotees, and which are enough
of to test the the physical robust, strength break and down, endurance lose
most you
your health and become a physical wreck,
as thousands do from such causes I
Under such circumstances yoh Would
willingly laces regain give all lost your health. jewels and all your do
to will This you can
If you but resort to the use of that
great restorative known as Dr. Pierce’s Fa¬
vorite Prescription. bless the day It Thousands of grateful
women was made known to
them.
For all those derangements, irregularities
and weakneases peculiar to women, it Is the
only remedy, sold by druggists, under a
positive that, guarantee it will give from the manufact¬
urers, satisfaction in every
case, or money will be refunded. This guar¬
antee has been printed on the bottle-wrapper
and faithfully carried out for many years.
As an invigorating tonic, it Imparts
Dr. Pierce’s Pellets regulate and cleanse the liver,
stomach and bowels. One a dose. Sold by druggists.
The Spirit of Sacrifice.
The spirit of sacrifice cannot be too
highly valued. Its presence or absence
has always marked the difference be¬
tween the loving, sympathetic, generous
and heroic man, and the cruel, hard, sel¬
fish, and merccnery one. Human nature,
everywhere and always, bows in rever¬
ence before the spirit which inspires a
man and to give up pleasure or advantage,
accept pain or deprivation for some
object or person outside of himself. This
11 —■’ii 1.‘ 1.TrnA v-r-r;v)! v( I ‘— , , - ■
for his principle, and the hero to die in
defense of his country; this it is which
Sll pports and makes possible the loving,
patient and helpful lives of thousands of
men and wem n who endure hardship
without a murmur, and spend their lives
in joyful devotion to some good cause
which they have at heart or to some be¬
loved odcs who are dearer to them than
their own private happiness.
I Iook upon a library as a kind of
mental chemist’s shop, filled with the
crystals of all forms and hues which have
come from the union of individual thought
with local circumstances or universal
principles.
A good conscience is to the soul what
health is to the body; it preserves a con
stant ease and serenity within us, and
more than countervails all the calamities
and afflictions which can possibly befall
us.
m i-ifl GOING NORTH
-OR
—TA K K ONE OF THE— WEST
BURLINGTON ROUTE
-THROUGH TRAINS FROM
ST. LOUIS AND CHICAGO
—TO—
Kansas Paul City, St. Joseph, Minneapolis. Denver, St.
and
The Best Line am! for nil Points North and
West the Pnclflc Coast.
CHEAP LANDS.
Along the Lines of the Biirliiitfton Route in Ne"
braska, Kansas. Colorado, There Wyoming is still and Government Northwest¬ Land
ern some
awaiting settlement. Those Lands are Axriculiur&lAud am on* the best
to be had anywhere in the country fur
Grazing par poses. For pnniffa'ets and other matter.
Jocaii >n and full particulars, a ddresisny Agbut
of the Burlington Route or the undersigned.
A MAP OF THE UNITED STATES.
A larjfo handsome Map of the Unit d States,
howin* North and .South Dakota, mounted ar.a
suitable for office and homo use, and issued by tho
sible “Burlington parties Free Route*” aoo!'C»tion will «>e furnished respon¬
on to
S.-&BT , HOWARD ELLIOTT,
h. Geu’i ll»utr,
Acti-nt BnrliBRton
TXI3U STAR
FEED GRINDER
The Fastest *«»d Cheapest
Grinder made. Orb ds 15 to */.5
SSS2£3jv\ bushels per nour o. Ear t orn
dry or damn, and all ainall
Grain. Writeforcircalar.
STAR MFG. CO.,
Lexington, Ohio.
AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL
DR. LOBB
tho
Nervous Complaint., Bright’s Disease. Strictures,
Impotency standing and kindred diseases, no matter of how
long or from what cause ortglBsttng.
pr-Ten t * ** 1 *<« days Book medicines SPECIAL. furnished Diseases, by mail rnr Hi fits r
on
PENNYROYAL CHICHCSTEIVS ENGLISH
PILLS
4
T*
t'hlchwter ( Wl (j Vadkaa 8«.. rhlla„Hfc
JONES
TIE
800.
JONES OF WNGHAWTON,
B1NGHAMTO), N. y, ’
ColdinTl^HeadUhlfsjg, piSO’S REMEDY FOR CATARRH.—Best. A "" *’ Easiest CCrU,in to use. *”
-
▲ ▲
It Is an
nostrils.
strength worked, to “worn-out," the whole "run-down,” system. For debili¬ ovei*
tated teachers, milliners, dressmakers,
seamstresses, nursing mothers, “shop-girls," and feeble housekeepers,
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite women Prescription gen¬
erally, earthly boon, being
is the greatest une
qualed as an appetizing cordial and re¬
storative tonic.
“ Favorite As a soothing Prescription and strengthening ’’ unequale<f rvervina, and
is
is invaluable in allaying and subduing nerv¬
ous hysteria, excitability, and other exhaustion, distressing, prostration,
nervous
tional symptoms, and commonly organic disease. attendant It upon induces func¬
re¬
and freshing dospondency. sleep and relieves mental anxiety
An Illustrated Book of 100 pages, treating
of “Woman and Her Diseases, and their
Self-cure,” sent sealed, in plain envelope,
on receipt of ten cents, in stamps.
Address, World’s Dispensary Medical
Association, No, 663 Main Street, Buffalo,
N. Y.
BUSINESS
COLLEGE,
NASHVILLE, TENN.
r This College, though yet in Us infancy,
h*s more thim <JOO former studruts occu¬
pying go-><l positions, many of tliem re¬
ceiving salaries ranging from $900 to $1.‘
500 per annum. For circulars, address
K. W. JEN SINGS,
f ! ’I :.LD If you ^■ have f, ?->’ l
■
-•? Rente ©r icslLY ' ' VY,-. »
SCOT
OF PIJBE COD fi.fi YE EX OSI.i \
AND HYPOrKOSPHITES
OF JcI3TF ASD SODA j
{ X« Tbla SUEUil prepnrnilon CURB contains BOR tiie stimula- XT’, j
t
tins properties of Die 1- hirer upophoaphUcf j )
and by pnyBldltms fine Kyrivecjtan Cod Off. Us* d
ail Die world ovor. It is aa j
palatable plain (X* milk. Cod Liver Three times as rffien- (
clous as Oil. A perfect
Emulsion, better than nil others made, l’or
ail tonne otlYaating Vhraaes, llnmcMlis,
Scrofula, CONSUMPTION, and Flesh Producer
as a
there Is nothing like SCOTT'S EMULSION,
It la sold by all Druggtais. I.ct no one by
profuse explanation or impudent entrontj*
Induce you to accept a substitute. t
f F YOU WISH A£x mWSSOH
It KVOI.VKU
purtjha&n one of the cele
hr^ted SMITH & WESSON
f“v«sr tans. manufactured ™ Ghent small arms „ \L )) , •/
and the ■Ss/af
tot Manufactuted cav-iee of In all experts.
calibres H2.38 and 44-i< o Sin
gleoravbbl© Targetmgada. action, Constructed Safety Hammerlesa entirely and vyv
Itj* buelit Nteel. carefully inspected 01 beat qual
manah'plnd vri stack, they for work
duranuHT are unrivaled Do for finUli,
cfceim irtnllefible unnnccnrncy. cnst-Oon not be deceived which by
often ipld for the article htiirntinnn
a^e geru ne and are not
onlv unreliable, but danKeroup. The SMITH h
WESSON re?a Revolvers are all stamped upon the bar.
with firm's name, address anu data* of pate nt#
and are gunm timed jierfect in • vorv detail. Irv
sist upon bavin# the genuine article, and if vour
nattier beiotv will cannot receive supply prompt you an order i careful s nt attention. to address
an
PoacrptlTeoataioeiie pile*t°n. SMITH an t nrioe* furnwho l upon at>
& WESSON,
W~Mentlon this pap^r. Eprin gliflil. Alam.
SNON CASES
Wall and Prescription Cues, Cedar Chests, Barber
Furniture, Jewelry Trays, Stools. Cabinet work of aII
kinds. Complete outfits for stores, Send for Catalogue.
ATLANTA SHOW CASE CO,.
SOUTHERN PRINTERS’ SUPPLY CO.
*w W* CABBY IN STOCK
Type, Cases, Stands, Presses,
I*«per Gutter*
AND EVERYTHING USED IN A PRINTING OB
PUBLISHING HOUSE.
rH-Call on as nnd SAVH .IIONKV!
34 West Alabama Street, ATLANTA, GA.
Farquhar'a Improved Cotton Planter
Very 8l»ple and Ptrrect Unrolled in its Operation; OroM
^ Boed or Fermi,
Mi k —wea g g w with remarkable rer
ularltj desired in any
, a ta¬
oont. Ch ll la
the ne*pe*t r
most Reliable
A and Beat
PLANTEfi in exiateace.
SEND FOR CATALOflFk.
ACdn.c, A. R. FAKGl’UAK. York. I'a.
BSliSStsS
OPIUM VriUlfil awtkfa'uxRa'S J. L. BTKrUKN*. Lebanon .6
I prescribo and fully an
Kf 4 anly hy tho We havo Bold Big CJ for
k. Ohio. D. R. DYCHF & CO.,
_ JUrtfi>1.00. _ Chicago, Ill,
Isold bv Dr uggists,
A. N. U .................EikM, 1890.