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AGRICULTURAL
TOPICS OF INTRRKST RKTjATIVE
TO FARM AND GARDEN.
Losses of Young Turkeys.
Many farmers do not have any “luck’
With the early broods of turkeys. They
die off while young, and the old turkey
goes with one or two chicks through the
season. The first brood should ue set
under a common hen—one of the quiet,
inotherlv varieties preferred. These will
not wander around and draggle the
young turks in wet grass. At any time
of year the very young turkeys should
not be let out of the coops until eight or
nine o’clock in the morning, and have
one good feed of curds or hard boiled
eggs. In midday the hen tind her young
will be better off roaming tbe fields and
searching grain, after harvest for scattered
American grasshoppers Cultivator. and other insects.—
Digging Rot-Affected Potatoes.
A few years ago, says the New England
Farmer , the rot struck potatoes here in
the autumn, and nearly all the farmers
they dug their had crops at once. The result was,
for to keep picking over all winter,
rot when many dug were that so they slightly specked with
I did not dig potatoes were overlooked.
during the my until some
time first of October. When
I did dig them, Dearly half were so
rotten as to be seen at a glance. I put
the sound ones in the cellar, and did not
have to pick them over. I h ive prac¬
ticed this plan successfully for years
Totatoes intended to winter should re¬
main in the ground aa long as possible
think, without danger of freezing. Heat, I
is what rots potatoes, and they
will keep cooler in the ground than in
the cellar.
When the rot strikes potatoes, if they
are dug at once many of the affected
ones will be overlooked,and put in the
cellar with good ones, causing them to
rot also, but leave them in the ground
until cool weather comet and all the
rotten or_.es can be seen and avoided.
Wisdom From Observation.
.After the barn the it hay is worth and the while grain to considef, are all in
advises the New York Time,s what has
been done that might have been done
better. The condition of tho aftermath
will in many places show that the mower
«ut too low and that the recovery of the
grass is too slow. The use of the mower
set so low as to shave the ground is in¬
jurious to the glass, which is so seriously
checked that recovery is Very slow. There
» e loose stones in the way that should
have been picked off or pressed into the
ground by the roller, and perhaps the
cutting bar shows tho effects of theso in
several broken sections. There are some
bare or half bare spots where the seed
has failed that should be repaired by a
little fresh seed and a few handfuls of
fertilizer. A good deal of hay has been
should damaged or made to cost more than it
by rain, which might have been
l rotected by the use of hay caps. Wfe
now of a good deal of hav that has cost
more for several turnings and dryings
before it was finally secured than for the
cutting and hauling in. One thing that
needs attention in many cases is the re¬
pair bad place of farm in roads, for only by reason of a
have one spot the loads may
been reduced in size, or, as has
actually happened, a wheel has been
smashed and a wagon disabled at a criti¬
cal time.
The Production of Milk.
We have previously remarked, says the
New \ork limes, upon the vast quan¬
tity of absurdity circulated by certain
persons in regard to milk and its origin
*nd method of production. Something
of this i otnes from ignorance and some¬
thing inexplicable from a desire to explain what is
from its very nature, It is
something in like tbe old story of “the
man the moon with his dog and his
bush,” who was anciently believed to
inhabit that cold world from certain in
distinct appearances, Thus Professor J.
W. Robertson's researches iuto the nature
of milk have led h m to explain its origin
in such a way as to mislead a very intel
ligent person into making the following
the astounding world revelation, Philadelphia which he gives Weekly to
in the
Press: “The recent researches of Profes
tor ,T. W.Hobertson of Canada shows that
the milk is elaborated from blood secre
tions and finished at the timo of milking;
the circulation of the blood leaves in
each circuit a quantity of serum in the
udder, which in milking is passed
through tions of the glands and gets albumen, its propor
fat, casein, RUgar, Ac.
Thi* is certain, that no milk can be
found, save a pint or so at the base of
each quarter, before milking; if milk
came from dissolved glands thero could
be no bloody milk*, bloody milk is the
fault of the glands in not doing full daty
and letting through the pores the sub
atance that nature has failed been secreting for
twelve hours and has to of perfectly
elaborate, hence the presence the red j
oorpuscles in the drawn milk.” the | j
That no milk can be found in
udder just before milking except idea. a pint The
or so is a wholly mistaken milking tubes,
■writer once used a set of ;
for experiment, iu taking the milk from
a cow specially used for such experi
m nts, fora whole month, and milk at the
first milking the quantity of was ;
the same as that drawn at the previous !
milking by hand, in the usual way; so
that all the milk must then have existed
free in the udder, or the tubes could not j
have drown it off. But if milk comes
from broken down glandular easily bloody substance, milk. |
there could b« very
Supposetliis breaking down of glandular
Bubstan e were to be excited abnormally
and hastened beyond the perfect designed; prepara then
tion of it for the purpose
it would be inevitable that the capillary
vessels which supply the blood would be
broken up with the tissue, and blood
would escape. Indeed, the fact that any
undue excitement or physiological defect
in a cow r causes the presence of blood in
the milk is one of the strongest facts
which support the theory that milk is
produced udder. from the glandular substance
of the
Farm and Garden Notes.
Deep \ soil and thorough ° culture.
„ Set hyacinths , . . about , half sand and j
in
keep them dry over winter.
Digging out with knife or wire is still
the stand-by remedy for the borer
trees.
J. B. Hals rsssmmwds washing with
strong soapsuds to keep down moss on
pear trees.
Keep the bearing surfaces of mowers,
reapers, threshers, etc., well oiled and
shelter such machine when not in actual
use.
A kit of carpenter’s tools saves many
dollars by mending breaks and making
general repairs, supposing each man has
some genius for their use.
The foolish farmer plants his crops by
zodiacal signs; the wise farmer piants
his when the weather is suitable and the
ground is in good condition.
As a rule those crops pay best that
require the most fcare and attention The
brains and the labor are what sell in the
markets in the shape of the crop.
Dairy farming furnishes a constant
source of income, and it may be carried
on with small capital without danger of
being smothered by larger establish¬
ments.
It is always Borne one else that makes
the poor butter, but if “some one else”
makes all the poor butter in the market,,
she has the virtue of being industrious!
at least.
Wherever sheep feed new sweet 1
grasses If flourish and weeds are destroyed.
farmers appreciate how great a bene¬
fit sheep are to land they would raise
mote of then.
Carious Currency.
The National Currency bill, which!
bears the denomination $10 on onesidej
and $20 on the other, is being displayed!
in a lamp store on Warren street, says(
the New York Telegram, Where it is at-,
trading considerable attention. Many 1
curio seekers and relic hunters have
called at the store and offered the owner
large sums of money for it, but the gen-i
tteman says it cannot be purchased for;
$ 1000 .
Among those who visited the store for
the purpose of looking at the bill was!
and Inspector Brooks, of the Secret Service,'
his assistant, and they examined the
bill c’Josely with a microscope.
It is a national bill, of the Second
Nationanal Bank of Springfield, Mass.
Government number Z, 9/0,793; bank
number, It 4716, and number of the bank,
and 131. has the was well printed on .January 1, 1800,
known signature of S. E.
who Spinner, also President that of H. Alexander, ht Jr.,
was of the bunk that
time. It has the cheek letter D on it,
which was Used by the counterfeiters in
those days, buthe Inspector said that a
counterfeit bill was never made on this
bank.
After making the examination, the
Secret Service officer said to a Telegram
reporter: “This bill is, in genuine.
That is* it my opinion,
but wlmr. I has a good back done ana is front,
think has been that;
some them one has split good bills and put
the together in this manner—not the lor,
purpose of passing them, but for
price they would bring as a curio, i
believe that a mistake like this was
made by the Government about that|
time in four bills, but the mistake was;
not discovered until the bills were put 1
into circulation. I will make a thorough
investigation and as erta’n if this is the
missing bill. If so, or if a counterfeit,
I don’t hardly think I will seize the bill,
but will hold the owner responsible it for
it and not allow him to transfer to
another person.”
The owner of the bill said that be
had written on to Washington for in¬
said formation, he had and already expected received an answer. reliable in¬ He
formation that the bill is one of the
missing four to which our Government
has long been trying to tind a clew.
He will keep the bill until everyi
means of the law is exhausted befo>3
parting with tho curiosity, The man
who called and said he would have to
destroy the bill, representing himself to
be from the Government was a fraud,
and tho Government will try and hunt
him up.
Book8 „ , _ as Dlsease .....i>„,, 1 ropagators.
A good deal of discussion having
taken place in England on the diseases subject by |
af the spread of infectious
means of the books in circulating lobra-/
ries, the Dresden municipal experimental authorities in
have had a thorough
vestigation of this question conducted,
A number of much used volumes from
tho ’own library were taken for the pur
pose. 'I he dust from the leaves andi
covers was sown in nutrieut media and !
cultures reared, the result being that
no mitrobes belonging to infectious dis
eases were found—the dust being, iff
fact, nothing but ordinary dust of A
harmless character. Again the dirtiest!
leaves in the books were rubbed firsts
with the dry finger and then with the ;
wet finger. In the first case scarcely any;
microbes were found on the finger; in ;
the second case plenty were found, but!
all appeared to be of a non-infeetious!
character. Especially is it noted that!
theie books were no soaked tubercle for bacilli. daysm Lastly,j spirit,
were two
containing ten per cent, of carbolic acid. ,
This treatment destroyed all the bacilli,:
and proved harmless to the volumes. 1
The conclusion arrived at was that the
danger of circulating libraries spreading'
infection is very slight, but a recommen
dation is given to dust books well before;
reading them, and never to wet th
finger in the mouth for the purpose of
turning over the leaves .—New Tort Poet,
Chinese Hare No Nerves.
The North China Herald says the qual-.
jty of “nervelessness” distinguishes the;
Chinaman from the European. Tbei
Chinaman can write all day, work all!
day, stand in one position all day, weave,!
beat gold, carve ivory, do infinitely tedi
ous jobs for ever and ever, and discover;
no more signs of weariness and irritation
than if he were a machine. This quality*
appears early in life. There are no rest-'
less, naughty boys in and China. will They are
all appallingly good, plod away
j 0 school without recesses or recreations
0 f any kind. The Chinaman can do
without exercise. Pport or play * seem
to him so much waste labor. He cam
sleep anywhere, amid rattling machinery,
deafening uproar, adults. squalling children
and quarreling He can sleep!
on the ground, on the floor, on a bed,
on a chair, raise in any China position. It of would mill- be
easy to in an army a
£»n men-nay, of ten millions-testeii
by competitive examination as to their
capacity to go to sleep across three wheel-*
barrows, head downward like a spider,'
their mouths wide open and a fly inside.
--
The Hessian fly is making itaelf felt in
puts of England.
WORDS OF WISDOJL
Daath foreseen never came.
A fool is always beginning.
A hungry man is an angry man.
New meat begets a new appetite.
When two quarrel, both are in the
brrong.
The liar is sooner caught than the
cripple.
A man’s own business does not defile
his fingers.
Change yourself and fortune will
change with you.
Be punctual and methodical in busi¬
ness, and never procrastinate.
Be not forward to assign reasons to
those who have no right to ask.
Act as if you expected to live a hun¬
dred years but might die to-morrow.
The easiest labor is a burden to him
Who has no motive for performing it.
You get more than the value of what¬
ever you give in exchange for learning.
The true use of speech is not so much
to express our wants as to conceal them.
Some of the brightest lights go out,
in consequence of using borrowed oih
Vanity is a refined selfishness which is
ever exacting homage, but never paving
any. has known ad¬
The man who never
versity is but half acquainted with him¬
self.
The world does not owe you a living
young man. ToU owe it the duty of
labor. *
A man of independent the mind he shows old his
independence by way treats
subjects.
Dost thou love life, then do not
squander time, for that is the stuff life is
biade of.
It is the cultivation of the moral side
of our natures that has given to our peo¬
ple as a nation their strength and grand
strides.
Sacrifice being the essential basis of
virtue, the most meritorious virtues are
those which are acquired with the great¬
est effort.
Sometimes it is hard to tell whether a
man is firm in principle or simply ob¬
stinate, but the man himself never ex¬
presses any doubt.
Death of a Fortune-Telling Bird.
The passengers were crowding up the
main steamboat landing iu llockay.ay, when
says the .New 7 ork Telegram, a
block occurred in the middle of the
‘Street. Everybody crushed against every¬
body else, while those in the centre
pushed back again and cried, “I et the
little chap have some air I” “Oh, he’s
dead!” “Boor little thing!” were among
the other expressions flouting around. A
passing Tdegram reporter elbowed his
way through the jam to learn the cause
of the excitement.
j An Italian pedler with with two-year-old a cage was
wiping bandanna. his eyes had ceased a imploring of
lie
jtold,~and the passing disconsolate public to have half-do/on iis foitune of
a
little green and red love birds were look¬
ing all broke up about something or
other.
Pressing in further one could see that
one of the eight little birds whose duty
it was to extract slips of paper with for¬
tunes printed on them at the rate of a
nickel a piece- -was dead. He was very
dead, arid lay down in front of the cage
with his little eyes shut and his little
toes pointing away up at heaven. Beside
the inanimate corpse stood the amazed
but mourning widow, tihe would peck
at. her dead mate’s body every now and
then, and anon she would rub her cheek
against his and try to coo him into wak¬
ing again. But he was dead—very dead.
Tho other birds seemed too upset to
work, and the Italian proprietor seemed
the most put out of them all. After a
while he tried to resume business.
“Walkaupa. Hava fortuna tolda by
ze birds? Walkaupa!” the dead bird lay in
The corpse of
front of the row of paper fortunes. The
mourning mate was endeavoring to kiss
it into life, and the other birds were
kissing each other and refused to disturb
her.
Once or twice he attempted to make
them move, but they wouldn’t. So,
wra pping the corpse in the dirty ban¬
danna aforementioned, the exile swung
the cage on his shoulder and went off
into the regions of the unknown.
Directions for Seif-Shampooing.
Half the pleasure of having the hair
washed and groomed, have says the do it New who
York Hun, is to some one
knows how. In England, in the large
stores, there is a department of ha-r
dressing where an accomplished barber,
with every convenience for showering
and drying, will wash the hair of ladies
ior one shilling. In this country a good
shampoo costs from fifty cents to spl—
w-hich is a large sum for so simple an
operation. combing the snarls from the hair,
After
braid it loosely and bind the end with a
small elastic band. Draw tepid water in
a basin and first wash the scalp thor¬
oughly with castile soap; then let the
braid fall in the water, soap and wash as
if clothes. Afterward thoroughly rinse
and wring the braid in a towel. Wipe
the head dry, undo the braid and brush
out, beginning at the lower end, when it
will not tangle. Let the hair loose in the
sun and air and it will dry in less than
half an hour. A woman’s hair should
be washed at least monthly if kept fin#
and healthy.
_
A Chauieliou Complexion.
Some time ago the Macon (Ga.) Tele¬
graph of the reported an extraordinary change
skin of a little colored girl, the
daughter of Tom Lumpkin, a former
porter at the city hall. Originally her
skin was brown, a ginger-cake color,
and almost a year ago it began to come
off by degrees, leaving a pretty pink
skiu, until nearly the entire body was
short changed. She went to Florida for a
while, and the brown skin came
back in spots. A residence in Macon
turned the brown skin away, and but
for the features she would have been
taken for a white child. Within the
last month or so the brown skin has be¬
gun She to appear again and again in spots.
was seeu recently, and the brown
spots on her face somewhat disfigured
her. Her hair is long, and mixed with
though gray, looking very much like gray moss,
of finer fibre. Her father is very
proud of her, and when out walking
on Sundays or hoiidaare ^ always earriee
her with him.
Fertilizers.
“There is no fertilizer that p ossesses the
property of attracting and retaining
moisture in such marked degree that Us
application will absolutely discount the
effects of a drought. Kamit, on account
of the common salt it contains, is sup¬
posed to conserve or attract and retain
moisture. Land plaster has the same
property. But neither of these can he
profitably used in such quantity, as to
produce any very decided effects in pre¬
venting the soil from drying. It is said
of such fertilizers that they ‘tend to
preserve moisture, but the tendency does
not practically thorough amount to underdraining, lunch. .Deep
preparation, rapid surface culture and plenty of humus
are the great practical conservatoru of
moisture in the soil. Very thirsty turned sous
should be plowed planting, deeply the (but surface not should
over) before the
be kept as nearly level as possible, dr^ crust
rows run on a level, and a
should never be permitted to form after a
rain.”—Atlanta, Oa., Southern Cultivator.
Brave Women,
“A toung young widow, of good
looks, good sense and experience, convention slyly cf
suggests ‘that the coming Suf¬
old maids (the American Woman’s
frage Associat on convenes in Cincinnati
(about the middle of November,) will be
a rare market for acbey elderly gentle¬
men.’ Those who have long since sown
their Wild oats, passed the heyday of life,
and are now all ready to sail into and any repairs. con¬
venient h. rborfor repose
Nearly every old maid in the country
will be found to have served in her early
youth a full apprenticeship at rubbing
rheumatic joints, and they are capable of
‘standing to’ a bottle of liniment and
flannel rag, long after the bravest of men
have de-erled their gnns .”—Little Bock
Ark., Woman's 0ironicle.
Clara’s Specific.
They were returning from the theatre.
“I am troubled with a slight sore throat,
Miss Clara,” he said, “and think it
would be wise if I should button my
c at tightly around my neck.” “I
would, indeed, Mr. Sampson,” replied
the girl with some concern. “At this
season of the year a sore throat is apt to
develop into something serious. Are
you doing anything Jor it?” “Not so
far,” he replied. “I hardly know what
to do.” “I have often heard papa say,”
shyly suggested the soothing girl, “that and beneficial raw oys¬
ters have a very
effect upon such a trouble.”
A Woman’s Way.
Miss Amanda Dei mas is one of the
most successful sugar planters in Louis¬
iana. She is a creole, and was brought
up to a life of indolence until the wheel
of fortune took a backward turn, and she
was thrown upon her own resources.
To the surprise of her friends she took
the situation by the horns, and under¬
took the management of the plantation morning
that belonged to her. Every
Miss Delmas may be seen riding horse¬
back wtih a big sun-shade over her head,
inspecting the gangs of workmen on her
estate.
Gen. Lew Wallace is what is known
as a base ball crank. He says that he
wrote hri life of Harris >n in thirty days
and went to every ball game played in
Indianapolis during that period.
This year’s corn crop, if loaded for
railroad shipment, would fill 2,878,571
cars and makes a train that would reach
16,449 miles, or two-thirds of the way
around the world.
Proof Better Than Assertion.
With such proof as the following letter from
W. H. Dean, of No. 278 Seventh street. New
York, It is not necessary to make the hare as¬
sertion that Allcock’s Poitotrs Plasters cure
lumbago. Mr. Dean says:
Some ten days ago I was taken with a very
violent pain in the small of my back. It was so
severe that I could hardly breathe; every move¬
ment caused great agony. I finally found out
it was lumbago. Being entirely helpless, a
friend sent out to a druggist and got two All
cock’p Porous Plasters; these were well
warmed and applied to my back, one above the
other. In half an hour, to my great delight
and surprise, I found the pain began to abate.
In two hours I was able to walk out and attend
to my business, the pain being almost gone.
Next day I was all right, but continued wear¬
ing the plasters for a week.
B smarck has sent to Philadelphia for a
dozen pairs of canvass back ducks.
Very Sensible “Japs.”
In Japan the old-school w-ooden physicians swords. This are per¬
mitted to wear only of expressing the is a
gently sarcastic way without opinion using
that they kill enough people who introduced
weapons. But the Medical druggist Discovery into the
Dr. Pierce’s Golden It found
Empire, carries a fine steel blade. was
that coughs, all colds, who tried consumptive this wonderful tendencies, remedy blood, for
skin and liver troubles, were, without excep¬
tion, greatly benefited. The Mikado himself is
said to have “toned np” his system by permitted its use,
and tlie importer was therefore sword
the exceptional honor of wearing the of
the nobility.
Advices from Australia show that Pasteur’s
method of killing rabbits is successful.
Do Not Think for a Moment
That catarrh will in time wear out. The theory would
is false. Men try to believe it because it
be pleasant if true, hut it is not, as all know.
Do not let an acute attack of cold in the head
remain unsubdued. It is liaole to develop into
catarrh. You can rid yourself of the cold and
avoid all cl.ance of catarrh by using Dr. rid Sage’s
Catarrh Remedy. If already afflicted your¬
self of this troublesome disease speedily by the
same means. At all druggists.
The costumes made by Worth, worn by Mrs.
Brown-Potter, the actress, fill 18 large trunks.
Conventional “ Monon ” Resolution*.
Whereas, The M non Route (I,. N. A. & C.
Rv Co.) - es res to make it known to the world
at large that it forms the double connecting
link or Pullman tourist travel between the
winter cities of Florida a d the summer re¬
sorts of the Northwest; and
Whereas, Its eleg “rapid transit” Pullman system Buffet Sleeper is un
surpa sed, its >nt
ana Chair car service between Chicago and
Louisville. Indianapolis and Cincinnati un¬
equal. ed; and
Whereas, Its rates are as low as the lowest;
then be it the
Resolved, That ia event of starting on a
trip it is good Gen*l policy to con ult wit 1 h. O. Mc¬
Cormick, Pass. Agent Mcnon Route, 185
Dearborn event St. send Chicago, for a Tourist for fnll Guide, particular. enclose (In 4c.
any postage.'
_
A JUfiUier.
A. few Hamburg Fig. will cure the worst
eases of constipation and indigestion, and their
occasional use will prevent the recurrence of
these troubles. So cents. Dose one Fig. Mack
Drug C©., N. Y.
- —-----—
Diseases Peculiar ’_o women, especially ^
Stamping and Embroidery.
"Yes, Lizzie, I like to do fancy work, but I
haven’t felt like trying that paftern-or any
me of prolapsus, sus and many ■wwf.’Srg of my
have been cured of various grave maladies pe;
culiarto our sex by this wonderful medicine.
It is the only medicine sold by druggists.undcr manufacturers,
a positive guarantee from the
that it will give satisfaction m every case, or
money refunded. Head gar an tee on bottle
wrapper. ______
There is one crop that never falls. It belongs
to tbe chicken.
__
Constimpilon, Scrofula, General
Debility, Wasting Diseases of Children,
Chronic Coughs and Bronchitis, can be cured
bv the use of Scott’s Emulsion of Pure < od
Liver Oil with Hypophosphites. Prominent
lessness, &c. All of there have now left, and I
dervel(fiwd U Co™umpticuL’’—
D.,Lone Star, Texas.
_
Bad mfeii excuse their faults; good men will
leave them.
5 BA
ilulMl I
acts at the same time on
m, the nerves,
THE LIVER,
1 ? THE BOWELS,
% and the KIDNEYS
l This combined action gives it won¬
derful power to cure all diseases.
We Sick? V
Why Are r\
r j Because we allow the nerves to r ]
M. remain weakened and irritated, and j
these great organs to become clogged
I or torpid, and poisonous humors are,
therefore forced into the blood that
should be expelled naturally.
Paines j CELERY •
COMPOUND ■Y
WILL CURE BILIOUSNESS, PILES,
CONSTIPATION, KIDNEY COM¬
PLAINTS, URINABY DISEASES,
FEMALE WEAKNESS,BHEUMA- ALL
TISM, NEURALGIA, AND '•
NERVOUS DISORDERS, .
By quieting and strengthening the 9
¥ nerves, and causing free action of the ■f ■
I liver, bowels, and kidneys, and restor¬
ing their power to throw off disease.
Why suffer Bilious Pains and Aches?
Why tormented with Piles, Constipation?
Whj frightened overDisorderedKidneys?
Why endure nervous or siok headaches?
Why have sleepless nights ?
Use Paine’s Celery Compound and
rejoice in health. It is an entirely vegeta¬
ble remedy, harmless in all cases.
Sold by all Druggists. Pries $1,00.
Six for $ 5 . 00 .
WELLS. RICHARDSON & CO.,Proprietors,
BURLINGTON, VT.
Log Cabins, lacking ele¬
gance, were yet comfortable
homes. Health and happi¬
ness were lound in them.
The best of the simple rem¬
edies used are given to the
aivi world in Warner's Log
voiSc ___^ tiP t abin Remedies made by
Warner of Safe Cure fame. Regulate
the regulator with Warner’s Log Cabin
Sarsaparilla.
ely’s C atarrh
CREAM BALM ^LY’S>|iJ
1 suffered from ThA co l f/TtjlAm ®
tarrh 13 i/ear* ^
dropping, throat into nausea, t)u . 0l -0 ON), REAM J
were
ing. My daily. nose Since bled the a, y HAYFEVEft
most j
first day's use of Ely's]
Cream Balm have had\
no bleeding, the sore
ness is entirely ^
D. O. Davidson, with
the Boston Budget. jj V » -
A particle nostril is applied is Of AVm FEVFI3
into each and & IHa
agreeable. Price 50 cen s * ■■ * ■■
-at druggists; ELY ^BOTHERS, by mail, registered. Warren 60 cents. St„ New York.
66
A r ft
M
TO Sf 1.
ft
SUCCESSORS 3 a f r O -0 ^ WHITE •ki7A‘S PURE > " %% CO •G&ziX to 9 p cr H* 5*
o
m TRADE MARK. &
JOHN T. LEWIS & BROS ■>
WARRANTED PURE
White Lead, Red Lead, Litharge, Orange
Mineral, Painters’ Calers and Linseed Oil.
_■ CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED.
M V
m i)\ s yyT^}0sm§Mt j
$a)A by nil Bmsg istg?^ Co.
ATLANTA oa .
FISTULA
and a 1 Rectal Disease 6
treated by loss a painless of pro¬
cess. No time fr oxn
business. No knife, ligature
or caustio. A RADICAL GSHZ
guaranteed treated. Reference in every given. case
Dr. R. G. JACKSON, 42*
Whitehall St., Atlanta, Oa.
DETECTIVES
Wanted in every County. Shrewd men to act under instructions
In our Secret Service. Experience not necessary. Particular! free.
Grannaa Detective Bureau Co.44 Ara4e.Ciaciimati.0t
Y A FAR 'I in this loca ity.
Wright, 233 Broadway, N. Y.
/AOLOiiA JO tor Consumptives and Asthmat
Vics. Send 2c. for it. Dr. Bartlett, Boulder, Uoi.
New and Second-Hand Machinery
TTe are Headquarters for Engines. Boilers, Saw Mills, W**
Mill Outfits, Portable Corn and Wheat Mill>, MM* ton f, 8 ' / tc.
Cotton t-eed Hullers and Grinders, Belting, Saws, P>P ,,, n kmWJ
In Second-Hand Engines, Money! a*,,!. '
addition to New Machinery, we have a large stock of We m
Planers, ete., eto., all tines, at Aatonishingiy Low prices. Terms easy. can
PERKINS. MACHINERY < 0.,67S. Broad and 58S. Forsytu Streets, ATLAJS -_
s E ""SISK Waterproof
! Serial
USB bssS®
Kon* —» tmlea* KmeYon3gnmor
t«np«d viili th« «e 5 ,
rniuB «ip* . E
TOiEUmiSS
■
2 IK ip
/Au J Icj™
i im, i®? rfteii
rw' IP«^$
_jiy ,'PWS'«“5iS worth f 0tf la ««me
t ; mes what I pay for it I used to buy at le
of |3 worth Magazines of patterns contains a year, an butnoweacW order
my of size I entitle
me to any pattern picturesfree.my any want, lthw
fore get my that pattern; f r „
anxiously a Magazine wwtch Desides, for. So my all whole tarTT
send 10 cts. the publisher, we are \V, pleased?, '“
you to j enBl
Demorest, 15 E. 14th number, St,, N. Y., y 0 „ wn Z‘
receive a specimen for in it and you will L
tainlylo e nothing, worth you win *,« ,
pattern order 30 cents; which if yon •
not care to use, you can pass over to me and i
will give you the 10 cents that you paid for til
specimen copy for it.
CAUTION
duced If a dealer price, offers VV. he If i.Y» Douglas them without shoes at stS i
stamped or says my u«n» J
And price on the i, ettom, put him doss
a fraud. ✓"Tl
■
-
m
mu i,
¥121
m
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3 SHOE ■ GENTLEMEN, FOB
IrSKSSSS'S 1
N \vT L. hand-sowed DOUGLAS welt 84 *4 SHOE, slice. the Equals origins cm
and only shoes costing from ©g to $9.
tom-maae L? DOUGLAS S3.50 POLICE SHOE.
Railroad W. Men and Letter Carriers all wear them.
Smooth inside as a Hand-Sewed Shoe. NoTadu
“w^L/DOUGL < 1 e
A SS!J .SO SHOE Is un/pelld
'"«rY.*ks 0 ^Ar&'«sfiv best the world for
MAN’S SHOE is the m
r0 ^!'l W e DOUof.AS°S2 t FOBB&S
. SHOE
to e L,fDOUGLAS 81.75 YOUTH’S School
W. the final! Hoys a chance to wear the
Shoe shoes gives In the world.
best made In Congress, Button and Lsce.lf not
All dealer^ write W. L. DOUGLAS,
eold bg votir
Do vou nil want lo
learn about
a Horst’ It ? Out How
to Pit . a ISggjai .
Good One? How „
to Know and Imperi* An
■fevtiona Guard ngainsl so M ®
Fraud? Howt
Detect Disease wment Wfym
and effect a cure is iyTMfp,
possible? when same H#w m
to Teii the Teetli? A«g nzm&atGx mmmmxii %
bv the VhP A
what to call the W//M ’
Different Parts TJ f 'I
Jivasv.i.airi.’sagas.jbfs of the Animal? t l Jkuw. ™ ..
evert
FARMER'S
WIFE
\) §«sr“rss “WfS
remedy If 1 TM»
BKMHt. Iftfl nize the Disease.
wMairlMF Sa ESSi&jg a 100-1 «se
giving (not a the amateur, experience but a of man a W‘®£S v, orthm r ‘m 1 Ir for I, r dofl/m*" ‘ 4
i of & I
cents) (luring a period W DU< a»e*l bo" ••
howto Detect and Cure a‘ J°d *!£,, , „
Feed ior Bugs and 8 “ Breeding^ r Fn,}
which Fowls to have indeed/ ior
poses! know and this everything, suiuccu !»<■
on
13-1 Leonard Mi eel. * • u ‘“
“0&»4iOOD" Seaitt
>a tl. S. StaadMd ^
Sent trial. f ,e 1
on FuUyWwraniti
iHWHUli paid. TON $35.
W ^ 3 propod'^
Other size, Catalog 0 *
ately low. Agents well paid, Illustrated
free. Mention this Paper. ,, »• »
OSGOOD & THOMPSON, BiEgtam^
Full Pearl,
Finest Four Steel. Blades, A
best Vr«6nar*nw«ltlh» knife ^ S a
ever %
•ffe red for on* / N
faUv. /
£3
ms YOU MARRIED?
BMrtraySSSr*
fiPIUM HABIT KSJIgSSjf!
SBftUE STUDY.
MIS PsssKsas’StfwsS?' Live at home end make more money wortlI1 "
lt
fStf
S 5
u Iji
A. N. U......