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I AGRICULTURAL.
TOPICS OF INTEREST RELATIVE
TO FARM AND GARDEN.
The Frightened Horse.
The feeling of fright is probably a sen
aation common to all animals from man¬
kind down to the lowest grade of life.
It is Also true, that the higher the grade
of life, the more sentient the animal,
the keener is this sense developed. The
horse ia universally noted for hia sagacity
and intelligence, therefore in him fright
is innate. When a horse manifests fear
... reMon’dccidel’that’ .. feT, . .
himself lurking in some object, which
he accordingly reason endeavors to avoid.
That same will, if properly di
reeled, undeceive him and con ince the
animal that he is mistaken. The horse
being unable to rea«on, except from his
experience, you should convince him, bv
careful examination, that the object he
dreads is harmless. Bring him indirect
contact with it It is a common saying
that if the nose is touched to the object
the animal will be satisfied; generally
this is true; the animal becomes ac
quainted with his “enemy.” It is a ter
rible mistake to use a whip on a fright
ened horse. The animal is already ex
cited, and will, in all probability,
associate the whipping with the ob ect
of his dread. Exert your own common
tense and calm your horse.
Colts especially should receive most
considerate treatment, and above all
leave things make your lessons thorough. To
the ob ect of his aiarm before hav
ing made him thoroughly familiar and
careless of it, is often worse, tenfo d,
than no attempt at all to break him
of hi* ikittishness._ National Uorte
Breeder.
Making Vinegar In Small Quantities
wnere families have no cider mill*
and but few applet they may easily make
their own vinegar by mashing apples in
a tub with a pounder. lhe pomace
thould then be put into a halt barrel
with holes in the bottom, and be placed
over another tub as a receiver. A fol
lower can be ulaced on the pomace and
he pressed down by a lever or stationary
keg, weights. The juice should be kept in a
until bung the open, and in a warm place
replenishing vinegar is made. By frequently
as it is drawn out, any far
mer’s familv can easily keep up their
atock. A few apples mashed and put in
a stone jar. covered with water and the
iuice of some soured fruit and berries,
can be used for this purpose. Vinegar
will stand quite a low temperature, but
it is better not to allow it to freeze.
Vinegar trom other suostances is some
times made. Wine vinegar is from
toured wines and the juice of grapes
Wine v negars are extensively counter
feited by chemicals. For sorghum vine
gar, to one gallon of sorghum sytup add
five or six gallons of water, with a little
yeast, or to a barrel of the strained juice
of the canc, a pint of yeast and a little
made tyrup. from Large whisky quantitie< acids of vinegar that are
and have
but » good nppe-uance and sharp acidity,
are unfit for family use. For molas
•es leant vinegar, take and one gallon of New Or
m -lasses five gallons of water,
putina little old vinegar to sour it, or
■tart it to fermenting with a little yeast.
Keep in a warm nlace and cover the
bung hole ol the keg with netting, to
keep is made out in the flies. Fine honey vinegar pound
the proportions of one
of honey to a gallon of water, thoroughly
mixed. For healthfulness and general
head utility apple cider vinegar stands at the
of the list .—JSete York World.
The Culture of Rhubarb.
At the request of several of our sub
•cribers we giv e the following hints on
the culture of rhubarb. The best time
to plant rhubarb is in the fall after frost
has killed the leaves, or early in spring
before it has made much growth, but it
may be set out without much risk at
any time in early summer before July 1.
The old roots should be divided so as
to have but ons or two eyes to each
ieee, and should be set out about three
eet , apart in the furrows of a small plow,
with four feet between the rows. Cover
two inches deep with a hoe.
the Khubarb land is in no way particular provided about it is
it grows upon,
not a dry gravel and is woll manured.
To grow it well, however, demands very
heavy m inuring ten or fifteen cords per
acre every year of atrong manure, rich
in nitrogen, is what is wanted. Hog
manure is best. Spread the m mure and
plow under when preparing the land,
and put some more along the furrows in
planting. fall the dea Afterwards 1 leaves and rake rubbish off about every
Nov. 1. How a light funow from the
pi nts at each side, fill this with ma
nure, and cover with plow, ridging early the
land well over the crowns. In
tprinir cultivate across the ridges and and
Btir often with plow and cultivator,
hoe until it it growmar too high.
The best variety for general marketing
in Boston is the Victoria, on account of
its large size and very heavy y-eld.
Thirty tons per acre is not unusual, and
even forty tons have been grown. The
I.innaus variety is earlier and preferred acid,
by some buyers for its milder but
it does not yield much more than half
the crop which the Victoria will pro
duce.
To grow rhubard profitably one should
be near h:s market, for the bulk of the
crop sells at less than $15 per ton, aud
often for $10. The expense of market
ing at long distances is considerable. It
it mostly grown within six or eight miles
of market.
The bed should be replanted the after
about aooui five nve years vears bearing, oeannir .taking as as me roots routs
■pread about and crowd a double large
amount of small stalk#, involving
the labor in cutting and bunchintr for
market, and making an inferior product
to that grown _______ on a - young bed. ,1 Anew a
plantation ahould not be cropped produce at all
the first year, and will not a
full crop the second, but after that for
five years is in its prime.
The price of rhubard is always high
early in the season, and some growers
grow a little of the Linmeus variety in
tandy land on the south tide of a fence,
to as to get it early.— Oultttator.
Farm and Garden Note*.
Keep tools handy.
Cut corn fodder from which the tweet
corn has been picked.
A window facing south in the poultry
house this winter will pay in increased
eggs.
Every time yon worry your I
yon shorten their live* and day* of use¬
fulness.
Sheep are better scavenger* for small,
unripe, wormy apple* than twine are, it
it claimed.
The English rarely drive their draught
horses faster than a walk. Trotting a
cart horse "ould teem barbarous to a
cockney.
The longer you put off transplants?
strawberrf Dlants the less ther there^ will trrasp wifi
the soil the more danger
be of winter.kill,»g.
f ’ * I ffi?
}"*J . H* 08 ' , 1 8 ; P a ? 8 ’ P a,l8and .. ,
vats carefully with cold . water, m which
>* a U ‘ t,e * &1 ^ or * oda; th « n ” n8e ’ and
then thorou g h, y »<* ld Wlth hot water -
Professor E. W. .Steward advocates
flaxseed as a medicine for pigs. It is
soothing to the stomach and intestines,
and it it also rich in food for muscle and
bone.
To have fowl* moult good quickly health, they
should be well fed, in according young the
and vigorous, and, to
paltry Y rd, a little extra stimulation
lust before and during moulting can be
defended.
-----
A Mender of Artificial Limbs.
- ^ , t tw
looked like aghastlycancanireof land
* bals, ^tcher but it shop wat m^the only the inner of the sanctum canni
ot a mauu:aetuier of artihcial bmbs
Arms, legs, hands, feet—what you will
™lb screcned m g a.ss cases
or laui about ini heaps, greeted audacious the eya
wberevent . retted. There were
pictures of gentlemen m various active
employments would who, having “tried your
valuable leg have no other.” One
of those grateful men was pictured in
th e RC t 0 f riding a bicycle. Another
bore his whole weight on an artificial
leg while p ying a miner’s pick at a mass
of rock over his head. Still another
stood on his sound leg. and with the arti
ficial leg drove a spade deep into fa:mer* the soil
0 f a garden plot. blacksmiths Three were thoeing
following and the pedestrian plow, without
hor-es, a artificial leg. a nos#
_ a ll with at least one
“Do they really do all that;” inquired
the reporter.
“Perhaps not quite as well it as you’d that
suppose from the cut, hut is true
there are a good many thousand men
w [ t h artificial legs doing work that one
would think likely to require the aid of
<0 und limbs."
“Then you come pretty nearly tup
plying any natural loks.”
“pretty nearly. The war gave a great
impetus to the manufacturer of artificial
limbs, and we are still making limbs for
the veterans.”
“How long does an artificial limb
last i”
“That depends upon whether it is an
a rm or a leg and upon various other con
siderations. I’ve known an artificial leg
to be in use twenty-live years. The more
elaborate attempts to counterfeit nature
th( . more liable the member to get out
0 f order and require renewal. We make
wms an d hands with which the wearer
wnte8 , uses knife and fork at table and
per f ormg man y operations that one
might think impossible.” artificial limbs?”
*• What is the cost of
“Anything from a few dollars up to
hundreds. The simplest ‘peg $50 legs’ each, or
w ,, 0 d eu legs cost from £5 to
Arma cost f rom to $75. Hands are
from $ 10 to $25. Then there are in¬
mlmer able contrivances for hiding de¬
formities. They may cost almost any¬
thing—the price varying with the nature
of tlie deformity to be corrected. Oh,
our friends with a leg or arm missing
are not so badly off as they once were,
and if science goes on in its march of
progress there is no telling how soon the
so-called cripples may be objects of
envy.”
Mild-Mannered Cannibals.
Every traveler in New Zealand always
expres-es a-touishmenf. wheu they dis
CO ver the cannibal propensities of the
inhabitants, that so gentle and pleasant
mannered a people could become
on occasion such ferocious savages.
Earle, who wrote a very reliable, m
telligent and but lit!le known account
0 f the Maoris very early in the present
cen turj, speaks of the gentle manner*
a nd kindly afteawa’rd ways of a New Zealand chief,
w hom he discovered to be an
inveterate cannibal. He relates shat he
visited the place where was cooking the
bo dy of a voung slave girl that his friend
ba( j kjn e d’ or the purpose. The head
was severed from the body; the four
q Uar t e rs, with the compressed principal and bones packed re
moved, were in the ground, and
j nt0 a gm ali oven
cove red with earth. It wa- a case of
unjustifiable cannibalism. No revenge
was ,i| gratifitd made'tbat bv the deed, and no excus*
c0l be the body was eaten
to perfect their triumph. fle-h 1 arle says
lhat he i earne d that the takes many
hour3 t0 eoo k thal lt j s very tough if
not thoroughly cooked, but shat it pulls
t0 piece., b ke a piece of blotting paper,
if web He continues that the
victim was a handsome, pleasant looking
girl of sixteen, and one he used fie
quentl v t0 8ee about the Pah.— (Jentle
mm ’ t Maganne.
’
How to Reduce Fat.
^ Ior ^e reduction . .. of , adipose .. tissue, .,
Banting has, in Germany at least, been
superseded by pedestnanism, ami the
walking is not to be upon level ground,
np-hill. adopted This by new indolent fad will certainly and
not persons,
P -__— 0 ®* • people t — r— are are more more or or less d;t
inclined to exertion In fact, laziness it
responsrbl# for much of the accumula
tion of fat. The new relief from obesity
baa been experimented with by the re
nnwnp.d nowned Bisniarck. Bismarck, who who has has in in this this man- man
ner reduced his weight from two hun
dred and seventy-four pounds principle to one
hundred and ninety. The of
the new system is to strengthen the
muscle of the heart, w hich is best done
by climb.ng heights. The patient is in
stmeted to walk up hill at a siow pace
until palpitation comes on, when he is
t0 8to P» but not to sit down, and then to
no on. Ho must walk several hours a
waging upstairs recommended. Pm
lessor uertel, of Munich, is the inventor
of this new “obesity and heart cure,”
and he advocates mountain climbing for
valvular defects of the heart as well at
for all diseases associated with oorpu
lency .—Btetm Beacon.
WOMAN’S WORLD.
PL.EASANT LITER Ai^RE FOR
FEMININE READEilff
The Tro _ eau Not So E borate.
A good _ Parisian . . dressma , ker says 111
the trous.ea has ceased to be the gigant,, .
outfit which it used to be. Eashions
now change so rapidly that what is in
“{Lf^ draendrMeJat oi 1
n „ „ e no, given to t bride tip-top
ves.ed of orange blos»oms, a. dinner j
parties and the opera: a traveling cos
tume: al;d * visiting [ dress gown: The a morning: the
8 own ’ a ba ! ' ^ ls
shown providing , hats,
f ame economy in
bonnets and mantles, and underclothing
is only provided for in a quantity and comfort. amply
necessary cleanliness j
It is found that trie store-keeper is the
b< st custodian of feminine tinery, and
*^ at l ^ c le ‘ 3 tlier ® 18 °J er ,^
safekeeping . . tSi
0 erva
k ct " er " Then a quantity of lumbering .
boxes are such atrial to temper, and
? licl1 an ‘“pediment to running, accord
mg to one’s humor, from one p ace to
another. It is a fearful responsibility wedded for
a frenchmani entering the state
to Lave a wife with a voluminous trous
If “ ho die ’ wl \ hin J hr ^f - vears
after her marriage, he is bound (allowance
be ng made for wear and tear) to return
it to her parents. Whatever objects are
lost must be accounted for. He is fur
nished w.th a 1st of the garments, and >
another The is retained of bride by the and bride bridegroom s family, j
notaries
also receive one each. The struggle for
influence between the mother-in-law
designate begins when the bride-elect
mu-t be placed outfit. in the hands of a the dress- old
maker for her One of
ladies wants her own favorite priestess
of fashion, and so does the other. There
i a often such a tug of war that the
match is broken oil.— Argonaut.
The Era of Hair Dressing.
Ine of hair dressing . at . , hand, ,
era is
days in which the simpler styles will b<
forgotten and women shall vie ia thi
elaboration of their tresses as now thej
do in the cut of their gowns. What
is muedi nearer individuality and surer is the prophe j
of growing in the arrange
men t of the hnir. I ashions in hair dress
ing are dangerous things to pass from
hand to hand. What is one woman’i
beauty is the deformity of another.
Good-bye and bon voyage to you,
Psyche knot. The png of Cupid’s ladj
love has worn well with the summei
irl. It is easy to ar ange under sailor
ats and easy to keep in place. But to
wear it with a home toilet wants a fact
as regular as Sappho’s, a figure poised
like 1-iana’s, the lightness of movement
and grace of a Hebe, the culture of an
Aspasia and the clinging robes of a god- tlia
dess or eastern queen. Aias for
commonplace and pug-nosed girl, th$
high-cheek boned,the long chinned girl,
the girl of the Koman nose and hard
featuies, when the Psyche knot walks
ftbr--ad, degenerated into a hair club,
with two corkscrew curls depending iik*
the tassels ot a patrolman’s knob stick
from the end.
Hair is going higher; it is also coming
iowe , and neither style ought of neces. 00k
sity to matter much to you or me. I
at your face first and no fashion that
suits it will be wrong.
< f the simpler styles, which one need
not call a hair-dresser to arrange, a tlal
coil of small braids wound pancak< head
fashion against the back of the
threatens to come in. With a full, round
cast of features and straying tendrils ol
front hair . 0 relieve it, this plate coiffur,
sometimes goes well. A small, round
coil, low in the neck, but not resting ot
the collar is more generally becoming almost
than any other suit of hair; it is
«h» -he ears «„ pronti- oi
neat or large, mating, piling the hair on top
the head, in such cases the
offending S members more notices - ie.
« d ears ftiid. behind .apt ttiein. th. hair pulled
loose abo\e
For the evening toilet it ed is probable death
that the bang has recen its
Loids XV. styles till kill it.
It would not l.-e surprising if a bare fore
head were e xhibited this winter by many and
women who can do it with impunity
some who can’t. A coming style calls
for a small soft roll over which the front
hair Is carried up in waves, the ends
being coiled and fastend in round, wavy
loops with small gold or amber combs.
A curl or two is allowed to fall on the
forehead, hut not to hide the brow.
With such a coiffure the home hair
dresser twists the.baek hair into a flattish
French roll, coiling the ends loo c ely on
top. For occasions calling for more elabo¬
rate arrangements as many puffs, twists
and loops as the mind of man ever de¬
vised are intricately entwined .—Delroit
Free Press.
Fashion Note*.
Ribbon bonnets will be worn through
the autumn.
Many of the new felt bonnets have
appli ue designs upon them.
Gray and blue reseda and ruby art
likewise effectively combined.
Cashmere colored brocaded ribbons are
tbowu in widths for bonnet trimmings
and sashes. with
Miniature brooms of green "worn gold,
platinum platinum handles, nanuics, are are wuzu as a- earrmgt mmuj,
by ladies of political proclivities.
Polonaises with diagonal fronts are in
high favor, and have the advantage of
be^gbecommx alike to slender and
stout fagure*.
Long redmgotes, plaited sk the rts, lead- pol
onaises and Directoire coats are
inir ing characteristics rhnracteristics of of the the nearly nearly im
ported gowns.
^ favorite arrangement of colors in a
cos tume is a brown polonaise bordered over with a
green skirt, which is
brown 8 tr es.
Large picture hats,” similar to thoss
worn dr ing the summer, are imported
j n f e ; t a na velvet for dressy autumn
winter wear.
B , ack and white onyj u the thing for
ha rln ‘ ?* f Tjwi of
wrings in the depth of wee.
Victor Hugo said that God had created
woman the coquette ns soon ns he had
man the feel
WHY WOMM WBD.
Botnauoe Whatever Nowaday* in
Finding a Husband.
fLj nnazlinu auestion to me f that w-^ch^ I constitu
myself a committee of one and went
a lot 0 f married women to
11 w their husbands proposed r to
* who had had
There wasn’t one ever
g„Z
Sis*“tTS
™ a broken heart, that she would wed
^ There wasn’t one who had ever
* ^ q{ ^ held, *ith
pistol at her head, while the brave
ouncad ^ anless she uccep
Li m be would kill her and then
. There w. sn't one who had
. q trained even a* the dagger's drugged point,
, nQt a £inp e wu r e had been
redded while in a eemi-conscious
state!
DorotbY,I confess to a could
0 f disappointment The nearest I
get g M t0 bo w the question of marriage
ad beeu was always that they
bad drifted into it.
T his is deliciously vague, but it seems
to mean that they knew the man, that
he had the privilege of holding their
hands and criticising their frocks for
time, and that then.when there was
n0 Bpe cial excitement in Wall street, a
pre8 ^ i ( l fent ial election wasn’t going on,
or anything e lse that was distracting,
the y suggested that it was about time
for themlo get married, And
This is the general shame. experience. Few x
thi nk it a sin and a women
bave more tban 0Be opportunity accompanied to
marry and that ought to be
by a U the frills and frivolities that tie
begt noye i writer dreamed of. The
Howells and James bnsiuess in tie
way of classic love making may be most
desirable for nervous people; it cham¬ may
calm and soothe them, but when
pagne and love are offered it wants to
M sparkling, and it wants to taste as if
such nectar had never been offered be
j ore white-skinned,
Tbe ci „ arette imbued,
odorless eved, smooth-faced young man
that ig ao p reva lent just now will never
offer ftnyboc iy anything but the flattest
' and when it
ci(lf , r fo r c j, ftmpagn f () comes and
to this j Bay }few give me i oe water
piatonio.— Yprk Star.
Before and After.
A few days ago as a Ridge Road oar
was ooming up Luke avenue, the driver
stopped on being signaled by a Driving young
jnan on a crossing not far from
Park avenue,says the Rochester Democrat,
The young man was accompanied by a
rather pretty young woman, who was
dressedm a light, airy summer attire,
and carried a fanoy-colored sun parasol. the
The young man jumped aboard car
first, and rushed inside, securing the
only seat vacant, leaving the young
woman to follow as best she could. Uf
oourse every one expected lady, that but he he would did
give up his Beat to his
not do so, and she,after standing awhile
holding on to a strap, concluded to “ av ®
a seat anyway, and, without the a word lap ol of
warning, plumped down on
her escort, saving as she did so: IB
as tired as you are, darling, and you will
have to hold me until I get a seat,
He gave a grunt of the hog kind, and
toldher la in Enghshthat (
could stand ^ or P sit . on the floor for all he
cared, but he would not hold her At
this several male occupants of the oar
offered thetr seats to the jmung woman,
but ‘‘He she is as declined able to hold their f offer 6 and “J 1 ®™ satd^ 8
before we were mar ™ d ’ a “ d *
here where I am. " P S
«P to this time srl-mtly smothering n£r their them
laughter, but the “ 7
*h«n, and remarked. , , „ T The car
as one
«»P “Jf Si
ag maki;ig rofe a target of him
seix, tite wie young young man hastily, £& nearly floor
doer” th«
, Je d J J mv 7 seat* I’ll walk
„ ^ tb oar The wife there was
ln the leRgt( bnt sa t
^t^KaSenSrs" ^ “ **
tlie rest of khe passengers.
The Coming Ruler.
The young Crown Prince of Germany,
aged 6}, who will be emperor when the
present young emperor is dead, is already
being turned into a soldier. Every day
he is compelled for over half an hour to
move his chubby legs and hold his im¬
mature body according to military dis¬
cipline, and is severely drilled by an an¬
cient sergeant major. He wears the
regulation uniform, and returns the sa¬
lutes of aged generals with dignified
nonchalance.
Ex-Speaker of the Assembly of the State
of -N ew York.
Btatb op N " Y E.“”S‘S"’ 1
My family for the last twelve years have been
using Allcock’s Porous Plasters, and have
found them wonderfully efficacious in coughs,
Colds, and pains in the side and back.
Abont ten years ago I was thrown from a
wagon and badly bruised. In three days these
plasters entirely removed the pain and sore
ness. Twice they have cured me of severe colds
which threatened pulmonary trouble. They
The Southern Pacific R. R. has mortgaged its
road for £33.000,000.
A Secret
Of good health is found in the regular move- of the
jnentofthe bowels and perfect intended action by nature
Liver. These organs the system were all impurities. If
to remove from "standing
you are constipated, you offer a and in¬
vitation” to a whole lamily of diseases ir¬
regularities which wi.l surely be “accepted,
and vou will have guests unwelcome and de¬
termined. All these unhappy conditions may
be averted by the timely use of J r. Pierces
Pleasant Purgative Pe.iets. Powcriui for the
effectual regu at ion oi the bowels and Liver,
establishing a healthy action of the entire
won .erful organism with winch we are cre¬
ated.
_____
The kitchen of the White House in Wash¬
ington, D. C., is run by a colored woman.
A Poser!
Jig. Jdac a Dr ug Co., IN- x.
Safetv o mother and ehttd and less Lability
to all unpleasantm ss after confinement result
from iheuse of Mother’s Friend.
Best, easiest to use and cheapest. Pfso's
Jtecaedy for Catarrh. By Druggists. 50c.
•n
Philanthropic Work.
Lady Herbert, of England, widow of
Lord Herbert, who was secretary of war
in Great Britain during the late War in
this country, has come to the United
-red orphanage in charitable, Baltimore.■ ^ J
Herbert is extremely the an West
passed a number of years in
indies m doing good to children, the negroes, the
She is the mother of ten
E arl of Pembroke being her eldest son.
Sfo'MheIdikhtg.tion ^ itom>t jM1!sieil W80 rt Waeh- of
’ * “'
w
The mausoleum of the Emperor Fred¬
erick, of which th - corner stone has just
been laid at Potsdam, will be a repro¬
duction of the Sepulchre Church at Je¬
rusalem.
Honej'Mooiit
atThJ'cTu^ny’ SoM^ “No, Brown, the
gSffffgAsassriffiRr® .«• ghm down on yon?”
Sbaers fecte i It was not her fault, of course, but iL
SWsjkgE
over again."
_
The composing room of the New York Times
is in the thirteenth story.___
If Sufferers from Consumption,
Scrofula, Bronchitis, and General DehUity will
try Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with
Hypophosphites, t ey will find immediate re¬
lief and permanent benefit, The Medical Pro¬
fession universally declare it remedy of the
of Scrofula and Debility in Children. Results
most gratifying. Mv lit'le patients take it with
lit pleasure.”—W. A. Hulbert, M. D., Salisbury,
Statistics largest show that raised this in year’s the U nited potato.crop Mates.
is the ever
Use the surest remedy for catarrh Dr.
Sage's.
Eiaht missionary ships are now cruising in
the North Sea.
The Special Offer
Of TS2 Youth’s Companion, of Boston, Mass.,
have the paper free to January 1,1889. and for
a full y. ar from that date. This offer includes
Really a $2.60 p.-per for only $1.7o a year.
583 Sewlae-Mnchine ••ttblilh
TjgA X ^bTo ad« At OMI la ail parts, by
sSSSBfpjacinf tr toaebinetj,
our
and good* where tbe people can
them, we wUleend free to one
sob ia each locality,the very
it sewing-machine made in
| & the world, with -11 the attachments.
IjAUae J J We will also send free a complete
of our costly and raluable art
BM|£*em|)les. la return we ask that you
f hjjt 29show what we send, to those after who id
tamj call at your home, and
V» ^months IprooertT. all shall become your ovrn
This grand machine ie
\fmtde which after hare the Singer out: before patents, patents
run
% run out it sold forSl^^s with the
_ sell* for
fSA ^ MFPftEL'fS'asresr ^-a tachments, and now
ost use
rnm a., w
I capital required Plain,
brief S--4 instructions firen. Those who write to us at orice csn se
g5iaa-a
#« Ely ’ sCreaniBalm '
worth SIOOO to any
^ °' c .§| ^jMan, Woman or Child
ay-fever far
suffering from
CATARRH.
Apply Balm into each nostril’
J ELY BROS., 56W arren St.,N.Y'
The Only Printing Ink Works
In the South.
HODGE & EVANS,
Manufacturers of all kinds of
Printing Inks,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
Ip LABORi]! (ta vised BIRTH EA$Y months 0 |
'$H bejsro 0 fj 6 N confinement. 5 aJew iosk
jer
FISTULA
and at R*ctil Disease 8
trested by s psinlsss of time from pro"
oess. No loss
business. No knife, ligature
or caustic. A radical ossi
guaranteed treated. Reference in every given. case
Dr. R. G. JACKSON, 42* Ga.
Whitehall Bt., Atlanta,
KiM CATARRH
where all other remedies fail. Our
if I method of direct and continuoui
I meuication of the whole respira
•v \ \as tory favorable system produces change saaiie of climate. effect
. a
No smoke or disagreeable odor.
ILLUSTRATED BOOK giving full
particulars,free upon application.
COMMON SENSE CATARRH CURB
60 State St., Chicago, I1L
k JONES
SBC XI
p m ,h i Steel .nn?.vj. F Bearing*, Braes
Iron Lover*,
Tare Beam and Beam Box for
Ivorr eiie $ Scale 60 For free . pnse lie*
mention thi* paper aad addreee
mi I 0F B’.KOHAMTOHt
BIN GHAMTOM. N. T
c'WMW.wa™ FSfi'iEsrr
DlaitlePllle Diair Sl ilSSa Great Rheumatic English Gout and
Oval Box, 34) round, 14 Pills, Remedy,
f|PIUM E 1 HABIT Free. Days.^Sanitarium No Cure. No Pay. o. Homs The
Treatment. Trial Fayette, Ind.
iluman. Remedy Co., La
HOME
AOiiOKA i*t> tor Consumptives and Astizmat
V#:c&. Send 2c. £or it. Dtt. BarilITT, Boulder. OoL
WANTED V w 4 h ^33 Broadway^N.*Yi
PEERLESS DYES Are the BES*T.
Sold) BY DRCQGISIK
..... PHOTOS .« M lovely, fuff-length Thurber & Co.jiay beantieAjonlyJOc. Shore,N Y.
60 torso.
asm A wm__(not style) ».
to fiTe dollars m a Rubber Coat, and dry to Hie hardest stonm It -p J?
at his first half hour’s experience m WET a m m Ban BONI him h TOWER’S f®“„^Teiy
^T.“ called
Pr SLICKER, all a name the land.
Cow-boy over
feels i f he does not look exactly like I HPg I B9 II |\S and Coat take is .ower ther. yjj If — y ol g“
Ask tor the “ FISH BRAND ” Sucxxa MB no 20 Simmons o a mn . ss**;
does not h ire the fish brand, send for descriptive catalogue. A. J. Towx*, T T
*
vSaW
\
Possesses many other Important prepared Advantages over .a "*
Foote.
BABIES CRY FOR IT.
INVALIDS RELISH IT. ‘
Makes Plump, the Laughing, Stomach Healthy BablM.
Regulates and Sl.oo.' Bowels.
Sold by Druggists. »5c., 50c.,
WELLS, BICHARDSOH & CO., BunmQTmi.vT
Baby of beautiful Portraits.
A Portfolio baby portraits, prints «nS
on fine plate paper of by Baby patent photo process a’yeu
free to Mother any born -within
Give Every Baby’s Mother name wants and these age. pictures; send at oci* ^
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Props., Burlington,Vt
It’s Easy to Dye
WITH
pijlMOHDflYfs
I - Superior
,N
_ Strength,
I Fastness t
v/, ¥ Beauty, ? ’
^ AND
Simplicity,
Warranted to color more goods than any other
dyes ever made, and to give more brilliant and
durable colors. Ask for the Diamond, and tain
no other. 36 colors ; 10 cents each.
WELLS, RiCHARDSQN <£ CO., Burlington, Vt,
For Gilding or BronslBg Fancy Articles, USB
DIAMOND PAINTS.
Gold, Silver, Bronze, Copper. Only 10 Centl,
P ETERSON’S MAGAZINE
is the cheapest and best of the lady'*,
hooka, excelling all others as a magazim
of literature, art, and fashion.
A I?. VlGHT original novelets will bs gir«q I I
| I during 1889, besides numerous abed I
stories, from the pens of some of th<
* most popular writers of tlie day. 0u| I
fiat of contributors is unequaled.
i m k | here plates; will large<iouble-«ized be, in 1889, 14 coloredfarhioe elegant steel | I
I plates, and handsome fancy or work-tabh I I
y r patterns, printed in colors, wood-illustration| monthly, bo I
sides hundreds of fine
E V VERY number will contain a full-size pap«
| dress number - pattern, in itself, worth as it the will price enable of a lady thi j I
* J to cut out her own or her children’! I
dresses.
R k ENOWNEB places and people will fnrnlib
| subjects for handsomely-illustrated of art- I
I cles; these, with a series papets
~ “Talks by a Trained Nurse”—will protl
valuable features for 1889.
s klCK-BOOJI, | toilette, cooking, the gardeD, and home. othei
I recipes; articles on
f furnishing, and household management; j
also a mothers’ department, make -1 Petal*
r son ” invaluable to every woman.
o k XJB fashion department will contain the
j newest and most stylish designs in dress
I for ladies and children, both the foreveryday latest stylet
_ ^ an <j outdoor wear; also
in bonnets and hats.
^ OWis the time to subscribe or to get up * j
i 1 with grMl
| club. Terms, *2.00 per year, premia™
I reductions to clubs and elegant lrM
^ * m for getting up clubs. Sample clubs. copies
.. to those desiring to get up
PETERSON’S MAGAZINE, Pliiladeiphlai P*<
<106 Chestnut St.,
Mtimolt this patob.______—
EVERY
(W FARMER’S
WIFE
WM3 what the matte?
knowing how to effect A
Klffll.S W was or does recot
KSWlh JtraSa miL remedy ff she Mi
HI 'Wl nize not right the Disease. as at an f J
FfS-BilfB
ItB.'Y.itirtfajstSj'Shffjjs
134 Leonard Street. N- *• t' 1 ”’-
MEN AND BOYS!
Do you want to
learn all about
a llorse ? How
to Pick Out a
Good One ? How
to Know Imper¬
fections and so
Gnard against
Fraud? Disease How to
Detect
and effect a cure
when same is
possible ? How T’l
to Tell the Age ? ly-Mj
by tlie Teeth
What to call tlie
Different Parts
of the Animal? T l thi*
HOW MANY LINKS IN THE CHAW*
sIm'-Tn^CASH oivw *iWer. AWAri and
Mali your answer with 2Sc. yom
will receive frtt for *1x month* the brightest:wad mm
\m, and names of winner* published in Tire ^ prk*
as*. ^
Friend, Chicaco, IlL ___
CATARRH
Sold by druggists or sent by B
50c. E. T. Hazeltine, Warren, ra- pi
I ASTHMA jMMM
ei.OO.^Dnz^dgWorbvm^^^^^
at lOTipiipjSfe® RisrrltiffC, Circulars free. 846, Mizmea vvpanoAh®** pv^,
DOWIILNITSOCIETY, B ox —.
* hem. and make more money w0! *“’
MM Liv. At ]t
j,
Brewater Safety Kern hol der Co.. —
—
■ A. N. C. FortV-sAj?
-------